Providence Riverfront I-195 Land Forum Audio


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With over 200 people in attendance, Providence’s Point Street Dueling Pianos ended up being a hot ticket on Tuesday evening. The event, a forum about the proposed construction of a baseball stadium for the PawSox hosted by Harvard Business School Association of Southeastern New England and Leadership Rhode Island. In favor of the stadium were Syd McKenna, Listening Tour regular and Community Outreach Director for the team, as well as Patti Doyle, the team’s spokesperson. In opposition was Ethan Kent, Senior Vice President of Project for Public Spaces in New York, and Sharon Steele, Quality of Life Chair and Past President of the Jewelry District Association. The overwhelming majority of the room was in opposition and remained unconvinced by the end of the evening.

One of the more unique moments toward the end when, referring to issues related to the intersection between patrons of the night clubs downtown and residents of the Jewelry District, Syd McKenna tried to make it into a class-ethnicity issue. She tried to rebuke Steele and say that the PawSox would be welcoming for all Rhode Islanders, whereas the opposition was elitist and didn’t welcome certain segments of the population. As we have seen earlier, the reality is that stadium construction causes massive public debts and, as is the case with Rhode Island, these shortcomings would probably be taken out on the poor.

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Photo by Ethan Gyles.
Photo by Ethan Gyles.

Tuesday to Tuesday arts and entertainment calendar


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roy3It is our hope that this new feature – the ‘Tuesday to Tuesday Arts and Entertainment Calendar’ will bring a lighter side to the fare. As we move into the dog days of summer, I’m open to tips and press releases regarding the events you or someone you know may be holding in the next few weeks. Feel free to e-mail data to me at andrew.james.stewart.rhode.island@gmail.com.

MY PICKS
Here is my selection of events that you should definitely consider checking out this week.

  • 8/25
    Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6
    Take the time to learn a skill. Art is a way to free the soul from the doldrums of daily life.
  • 8/26
    MOVIES ON THE ROCKS: Breakfast Club at Ballard Park Quarry Meadow, Dusk (8:15-8:30), Free
    The classic of high school angst and Saturday detention. After three decades, the hairstyles and music are simply hilarious, but the message remains the same.
  • 8/27
    Songwriters in the Round at AS220 Main Stage, 7 pm, $5
    The opportunity to see some of the finest talents of the RI independent music scene.
  • 8/28
    Gallery Talk With Mara Metcalf at AS220 Project Space, 5:30 pm, Free
    The ability to have a free gallery talk is worth your time, trust me.
  • 8/29
    Film Screening: (IT’S A) COMPLEX WORLD at Slater Mill, 8 pm, Free
    The cult classic! This film is a bad caper picture, filmed at the -original- Lupo’s, and featuring the music of the Young Adults.
  • 8/30
    Jay Brunelle, Bobby B. Keyes, “Sax” Gordon Beadle, The Young Adults at Slater Mill, 11 am, Free
    Rudy Cheeks, saxophonist in the Young Adults, was one of this writer’s mentors and deserves your patronage.
  • 8/31
    I admit it is a hard week and today was pretty rare. This is why I need people to e-mail me events!
  • 9/1
    Open Sewing Circle at AS220, 9 pm, Free
    Why not? It is a skill that helps bring people together and form bonds well beyond the thread.

8/25
Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 12-1 pm, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Single Lash, Future Museums, Pixels, and Twenty Four Hours at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, $5

Boot Leg Soul, John Paul Colasante, Not For Coltrane at AS220 Main Stage, 9:30 pm, $6

Beach House at Lupo’s, 9 pm, $27 adv/$30 day of

8/26
MOVIES ON THE ROCKS: Breakfast Club at Ballard Park Quarry Meadow, Dusk (8:15-8:30), Free

Vinyasa Yoga with Julie Shore at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, Noon-1 pm, $5

Open Level Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30-8 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Music at Sunset – Super Chief Trio at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 6 pm, Member $7, Non-Member $10

Arkham Film Society presents: THE NORTHVILLE CEMETERY MASSACRE at 95 Empire, 9 pm, $5

Jeff Lavender (Valencourt), Rich Ferri, Travis Alexander (Ghost Thrower), Ava Callery at AS220 Main Stage, $6

Earl Sweatshirt at Lupo’s, 9 pm, $22.50 adv/$25 day of

Shark Rock at The Met, 9 pm, $8

8/27
Musette Explosion at The Towers, 7 pm, $15

Evening Yoga at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:15 pm, $13 per class; $60 for 6 classes

Movies on the Block: BADLANDS at Grants Block, 7:30 pm, Free

2015 Burnside Music Series: Dirt Pony + DJ LaRochelle at Kennedy Plaza, 4:30 pm, Free

Songwriters in the Round at AS220 Main Stage, 7 pm, $5

Top 5 Fiend Presents: Seven Hats Parade, Debcaster, Hwuevo, Feng Shui Police at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $7

Debcaster, Two Brothers, Feng Shui Police, The Novi Giants at AS220, 9 pm, $7

8/28
Gallery Talk With Mara Metcalf at AS220 Project Space, 5:30 pm, Free

Lulz! Comedy Open Mic Night at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, Free

Triangle Forest, Home Body, House Red at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

8/29
Newport Stamp Act Protest Re-Enactment at Colony House, 1 pm, Free (Afterparty $25)

Traditional Irish Music Session at AS220 Bar & FOO(D), 4 pm, Free

Chalk the Walk at Providence Children’s Museum, All Day, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person

Field of Artisans at South Kingstown Town Beach, 11 am, Free

Slater’s Art and Manufacture Festival at Slater Mill, 11 am, Free

Film Screening: (IT’S A) COMPLEX WORLD at Slater Mill, 8 pm, Free

Morals, She Said That, Twin Foxes, Otp, and Forrest Fires at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

Mike Mave, Nostalgia, Beth Killian, Sun of Sound, Big Scythe and SOL, and Aubrey Mable at The Met, $10 adv, $12 day of

8/30
Core Workout with Daniel Shea at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 9 am, $5

Beginner Ballet at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 10:30, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Intermediate Ballet w/ Stephanie Albanese at 95 Empire Dance Studio, Noon, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Jay Brunelle, Bobby B. Keyes, “Sax” Gordon Beadle, The Young Adults at Slater Mill, 11 am, Free

The Wankys (Uk), Who Killed Spikey Jacket?, Cabbageheads (Mi), and Funeral Cone at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

8/31
Intermediate/Advanced Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

9/1
Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, Noon, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Open Sewing Circle at AS220, 9 pm, Free

Movie Review: BEST OF ENEMIES


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MV5BMjA0MzA1ODA5NF5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwMDc3OTU5NTE@._V1_SX214_AL_The new documentary BEST OF ENEMIES (dirs. Morgan Neville, Robert Gordon) is one of those films that is both intellectually stimulating and wickedly entertaining, a picture that makes one laugh out loud multiple times while also causing serious thought. Rarely do we see such fare, which is why I highly recommend it.

BEST OF ENEMIES is now playing at the Cable Car Cinema & Cafe.

The film is set in 1968, a year remembered by those who lived it as the beginning of the end of so many great things. Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy were both gunned down, there were riots and protests in the streets, and Lyndon Johnson had scuttled his administration with a Vietnam policy that was described as genocidal by those who knew the truth about our actions in Southeast Asia. And all the while, ABC, the third-place network on television, had decided to try something different in their coverage of the Republican and Democratic National Conventions.

Instead of following the lead of NBC and CBS, with their gavel-to-gavel coverage of the proceedings, they decided to bring in two of the leading intellectuals of the day to engage in a series of brief debates following a montage of highlights from the day’s events. On the left was author Gore Vidal, scion of a populist Democratic senator, the creator of such scandalous works as Myra Breckinridge and the screenplay of the X-rated CALIGULA, he was open about his love affairs with men and espoused a libertine worldview combined with liberal politics that generated some of the best American political prose of his generation. To the right was William F. Buckley, Jr., the editor and founder of the hard-right magazine National Review, a man who had taken up conservative politics and transformed a movement of crotchety kooks and racists into the political force that elevated Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan to the heights of power while consolidating the Grand Old Party by hacking off the left wing of that political body. Both men were well-spoken, well-born, well-educated intellectuals at the peak of their powers. What followed was an epic, multi-evening intellectual wrestling match, the likes of which had never been seen before on television.

The film is excellent because it functions on two levels. On the first, it is a stellar narrative, retelling one of the most important moments in twentieth century American politics. The 1968 election was the first instance when Americans began to vote based on identity politics issues as opposed to class solidarity, as seen by the successful implementation of Richard Nixon’s Southern Strategy that year. It was the first time that dog-whistle politicking took on any sort of real force in the voting booth, with Nixon’s repeated harping on about ‘law and order’ really serving as code for white animus towards the newly-desegregated black population. It was the first election since World War II that the contest for the executive office served as a referendum on an ongoing conflict, a wasteful and stupid war that had none of the support at home or abroad that the Greatest Generation had found two decades before.

And it was also the first time that the political conventions were broadcast in color, bringing me to my second point. Not only is the film a history lesson, it is a love poem to the days of rabbit ear antennas, switching the channel by touching an actual dial, and having only three networks and PBS to watch, within a decade HBO and Ted Turner would begin to develop the early stirrings of what became cable television. This is a film about the way that Americans are told about the news of the day, how it is delivered, and why we think the way we do about these events. It has all the wisdom of a communications class about newsroom production and makes clear what we have lost with the ability to choose from multiple networks that cater to our socio-political whims. As I have said elsewhere, this was perhaps the last election that had some legitimacy to it, now all we have are stage-managed rock concerts with primaries that function in a fashion closer to American Idol.

The film’s thesis is an admirable one where the filmmakers argue, rightly, in my view, that this was the place that gave birth, perhaps accidentally, to the yelling-and-screaming format of television news we deal with today, populated by the O’Reillys, the Maddows, and the other hucksters who serve up saccharine-flavored slop we are expected to take for socio-political analysis. I say accidentally because it is quite clear from the start that Buckley was totally oblivious about what to expect from Vidal, who rehearsed his lines backstage, did enormous research on his opponent beforehand, and carried himself as a television star as opposed to a political scientist while in the ring. And I also say accidentally because, had Vidal known what kind of monster he was creating by stage acting the way he did, he might very well have never accepted the invitation to appear. For the rest of his life, Vidal would return again and again to the theme of how ridiculous the American political process had become. He decided to become an expatriate and work from his home in Italy in part because he had no stomach for the crassness, the shallowness, and the buffoonery that essentially defined American politics from 1968 onwards. But he never was able to come to the conclusion that he was partly to blame for getting our civic dialogue to that point.

With another election upon us, it is clear that the electorate is as divided as it was in 1968, if not more so. On the one hand, we have a Republican primary loaded with certified lunatics who are getting upstaged by, of all people, a blithering idiot land developer whose entire career has been based around making financial failure look profitable. The Democrats are no better, insistent on crowning Queen Hillary despite the fact that people would rather vote for a box of cereal than her. The film concludes that Vidal won the battle with Buckley, which is not giving away anything surprising. But what is surprising is that it was Buckley who, in the long term, won the war. We now live in a state of affairs where the Democrats behave like Richard Nixon, pro-choice, pro-union, pro-war, and environmentally-mindful to a degree. By contrast, Vidal, whose politics were populist New Deal Democratic stances, seems like a card-carrying Communist next to an Obama or Clinton. That kind of dramatic irony is something you could describe as made for television.

Bernie Sanders is no socialist


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Bernie_Sanders_2016I want to talk to you about a socialist from Vermont. Born in New York, he was active in the anti-Vietnam and civil rights movements in the 1960’s before moving to the town of Burlington, where he spent the next several decades creating a new set of socio-political ideas that combined the basic outlines of old European socialist ideology with the harsh realities of modern industrial capitalism, as well as a powerful critique of the ecological havoc wrought by the global hegemony of greenhouse gas pollution.

But wait! If you thought this was the beginning of a stump speech for Senator Bernie Sanders, you are dead wrong. In fact I am referring to the late Murray Bookchin, a man who, in many ways, was the striking opposite of what Bernie Sanders is in every way. Bookchin was a scholar, activist, and writer whose polemics against capitalism but also cultish politicking on the far left and opportunism by people like Bernie Sanders make for great reading nine years after the man died in 2006.

I have previously written that I have a sense of respect for those who support Sanders in his quest for the Democratic Party nomination. Or rather, I did. What has made me change my mind is the reaction of Sanders supporters to the direct action techniques of #BlackLivesMatter protestors in recent weeks, which seemed to gravitate between condescending and racist to religiously fanatical and racist. “Don’t these people realize Bernie is the best thing going for them in this campaign?” “Don’t they know that Bernie marched with Martin Luther King Jr.?” In my own praxis (a socialist term referring to the combination of philosophy with action), I have a very simple rule: if someone is not going to do any real harm, I let them stick to their beliefs. It is not my place as a reporter to break the news story about how there is no Santa Claus because that would only hurt those who believe in Santa, individuals who have no capacity to cause serious damage to others.

But with the level of condescending, self-important, prejudiced nonsense coming from Sanders supporters, I do see a real threat. I can imagine in very concrete terms a moment in the near future where, should Sanders not topple the Clinton machine, his disillusioned supporters will point out the #BlackLivesMatter zap as the moment that did him in and the anti-black animus will soon follow. And in a technical sense, they would have some concrete grounds to stand on. Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight.com recently carried a story by Harry Enten titled THE BERNIE SANDERS SURGE APPEARS TO BE OVER, where Enten shows with mathematical precision that Bernie has reached his crescendo:

Not long ago, Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders was surging. In just a few months, the Vermont senator halved Hillary Clinton’s lead in Iowa and moved to within shouting distance of her in New Hampshire. But it’s probably time to change the verb tense. No longer is Sanders surging. He has surged. From now on, picking up additional support will be more of a slog… Support for Sanders rocketed up in Iowa but has leveled off since June. The story is nearly the same in New Hampshire. Sanders rose from June to July in the Granite State, but his ascent slowed.

Eneten points out several possible reasons that could have contributed to this. Part of it has to do with the fact Bernie was the newcomer when he announced his candidacy at the end of May as compared to Hillary Clinton, who seems to have been running for office since the day after the 2012 inauguration. At the beginning of the summer, the Run Warren Run PAC was dissolved when the Senator from Massachusetts announced she would not make a Presidential bid. As a result, the Warren supporters combined forces with the Sanders supporters, based in part on politics and in part because of their mutual dislike of the Clintons. Of course, this is nothing new, it happens every election cycle, the Democrats roll out a seemingly radical candidate who has a great opening sprint but cannot maintain pace throughout the race. Do the names Howard Dean or Dennis Kucinich sound familiar? But for those who are Feeling the Bern of Sanders fever, the coincidental occurrence of the #BlackLivesMatter protest with his sluggish poll performance just breeds conspiratorial fever dreams that it was those pesky blacks who killed Bernie’s chance.

But besides that, there is also the fact that Sanders, for all his bluster, has never been serious about this. Just look at the Issues page on BernieSanders.com:

Screen Shot 2015-08-20 at 10.15.09 PM
What, you think they said ‘OOPS, we forgot!’?

Those are all great phrases and I do not doubt that there are serious people in the general population who are earnest about those topics. But there is one phrase that every serious presidential candidate always puts on their website, without fail: FOREIGN POLICY. For all that can be said about candidate Obama, one thing that can be said without a doubt is that he had foreign policy in his campaign literature from day one. Just look at his page from September 12, 2007, as archived by the Wayback Machine on the Internet Archive:

First thing on the list was a foreign policy goal.
First thing on the list was a foreign policy goal.
Obama Closeup
STRENGTHENING AMERICA OVERSEAS and PLAN TO END THE IRAQ WAR, before anything else.

Now look at Hillary Clinton’s website. It’s a huge, in-depth page that has multiple paragraphs dedicated to foreign policy alone. Granted, as Secretary of State she basically committed a bunch of war crimes and let Joe Biden handle the Iraq withdrawal, but at least she is trying.

Screen Shot 2015-08-21 at 1.06.12 PM
She knows how to say “Crimes Against Humanity” in 40 different languages!

This is not even hard work! And that brings me to my second point, the real Bernie Sanders. He makes some great speeches, but behind the verbiage is a pretty repellent record.

Since we are on the topic of race and Bernie, let’s talk about his supposedly great record as a young man. Everybody right now is in love with the pictures of him organizing in the Civil Rights era, and that’s a respectable feat. But what they are not talking about is what turned him on to socialism, his time in Israel living on a kibbutz. For the goyim, the kibbutz is sold as a sort of Israeli utopian experiment, a state-sponsored socialist collective where the children are cared for in a communal fashion, everyone eats and works together for the benefit for all, and the socialist dream is realized. But what they do not tell you is the bitter and painful truth about the kibbutz as an apparatus of state violence by the Israeli government against the Palestinians. Some are built in Israel proper while others are built in the Occupied Territories, which displaces the native indigenous inhabitants of the land. And, for all the socialist fluff, Arabs are strictly forbidden from joining in the effort. In fact, Noam Chomsky and the late Tony Judt, both adamant critics of Israeli policy, cite their time as kibbutzniks as one of the reasons they rejected Zionism. By contrast, Sanders thinks of this as the ideal.

When Sanders moved to Vermont, Murray Bookchin was already at work on a serious corpus of anti-authoritarian socialist literature tinged with environmental ethos that were spot-on way before being “green” was a trendy thing. When he saw Sanders, he gave him a chance but quickly came to see him as an opportunist and showboat, writing an article called SOCIALISM IN ONE CITY? THE BERNIE SANDERS PARADOX: WHEN SOCIALISM GROWS OLD for the January 5, 1986 issue of Socialist Review magazine. It is extremely difficult to locate the original article, but someone did print a quote in a thesis for Cornell University, which I replicate here:

To spoof him for his unadorned speech and macho manner is to ignore the fact that his notions of a “class analysis” are narrowly productivist and would embarrass a Lenin, not to mention a Marx…The tragedy is that Sanders did not live out his life between 1870 and 1940, and the paradox that faces him is: why does a constellation of ideas that seemed so rebellious fifty years ago appear to be so conservative today?

For the rest of his life, Bookchin would propose what he alternatively called ‘post-scarcity anarchism’ and ‘communalism’, a system of direct democratic governance that could be implemented in real time for Burlington. In reply, Sanders dismissed him as a kook.

After serving in state politics, Sanders went national in 1992 and remained in his seat thanks to a hushed-up alliance with the Vermont Democratic Party, an arrangement where the man with funny hair spouts off populist rhetoric while voting the party line and then some, such as his opposition to gun control, his vote against the Brady Bill, and . I had no idea the mothers of Sandy Hook victims were so offensive to his working-class hero ethos. For all his yapping about the Patriot Act, he voted for the 1996 Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, which expanded the racist capital punishment system and created the basic structures that the Patriot Act was hinged upon.

And just so we are clear, Bernie is certainly not making moves to stand in socialist fraternity with actual socialist countries. He voted in favor of bombing the socialist nations of Libya and Yugoslavia at the behest of NATO. And for those who forget, the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia included an instance where an American missile “accidentally” landed on the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, which qualifies as sovereign Chinese land. He’s voted for the various restrictions against Cuba when that was the national policy. He also supported the institution of the regime in the Ukraine, which most mature analysts describe as openly neo-Nazi, and has worked hand-in-hand with John Kerry to de-legitimize the Eastern Ukrainian Donbas, which democratically voted to break away from Kiev and has operated since under a policy of Leninist War Communism.

When asked in 1988 on his cable access TV show about his thoughts regarding the non-violent civil disobedience campaign of Palestinians, the First Intifada, overseen by the Soviet-backed and socialist-leaning Palestine Liberation Organization, he was more emphatic about Arab responsibility than anything else. In the clip, he does condemn a scene of brutality that had been caught on camera, but he does it in a way where it would seem that this type of thing was an exceptional case of soldiers getting out of hand as opposed to an example of continuous and systemic brutalization. When confronted about Israel’s siege of Gaza last year, he tried to claim that Hamas was somehow aligned with ISIS (they aren’t), ergo killing children is fine.

As for this idea of ‘Scandinavian social democracy’, let’s be serious. Scandinavia has a military budget that is far smaller than ours, hence the reason that they can fund healthcare and free college studies. But even then, they are not all that great. Scandinavia, like the rest of Western Europe, is in the midst of a refugee immigration deluge caused by American adventures in the Levant and North Africa. As a result, a right wing movement that is arguably more racist than ours, if that is possible, has found a resurgence among the voters.

By aligning with the Democrats, Sanders is giving tacit approval to the very party that launched the less-remembered 1918 First Red Scare, overseen by Woodrow Wilson, as well as the 1947 Red Scare, begun by Harry Truman. This is the same Democratic Party that jailed Socialist Party Presidential candidate Eugene V. Debs (allegedly Bernie’s hero), red-baited the living daylights out of Henry Wallace’s Progressive Party campaign in 1948, revoked Paul Robeson’s passport in 1950, gave final allowance for the Bay of Pigs invasion, and brought American terror to Korea and Vietnam.

One of the polemics that ended up being one of Murray Bookchin’s best was titled LISTEN MARXIST!, written in 1969. Bookchin had been involved in the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and saw way before anyone else that the independent spirit of the counterculture was going to fizzle out, that the glory days of Paris 1968 were flashes in the pan and the New Left was selling its soul to a type of Marxist dogmatism that can only called one thing, a cult. Bookchin was involved in revolutionary politics because he wanted to talk about socialism as a living, breathing, modern system of emancipatory liberation politics. Instead, he saw his comrades falling into a morass of Stalinist, Trotskyist, and Maoist locker room scuffles.

That is exactly my feeling about the whole Bernie Sanders thing. I am far too jaded by the Democratic Party to fall into formation and join in the chorus line. Now, if Bernie Sanders was doing something intellectually stimulating, like issuing an anthology of his favorite socialist writings as a sort of AUDACITY OF HOPE with a little more punch, and trying to have a conversation about socialism, that would be respectable. I would be on board and a full-time volunteer for a Quixotic campaign where, knowing full well he is going to lose, Bernie encouraged letting a hundred flowers bloom and a hundred schools of thought contend so to foster a national dialogue about Marxism, the Industrial Workers of the World, Leninism, and other varieties of social democracy. But instead we get this personality cult:

Chairman Sanders says fight self!
Chairman Sanders says fight self!

This is not a political campaign, it is a corralling action for Hillary in the form of a faux-leftist folk music concert. The Democrats needed a distraction to keep the masses in line because they know that people are not feeling inclined by destiny to vote for Hilary in the same way that I felt proud to vote for the first black president. They understand very well that people are sick to death of the Clintons. They also know they look like complete hypocrites for essentially installing a dynasty after agitating against the exact same thing with the Bush family. So who do they throw into the ring but Lincoln Chaffee to shore up the right and Bernie Sanders to pull in the left.

Personally, I have remained somewhat hopeful for Jim Webb, who very well could at some point pull a Hail Mary and steal the show in the last minute. A populist, moderate Southern governor sneaking in under the radar and stealing the race from the establishment Democrat, where have I heard of that before? Oh, right, that’s what happened in 1992 with Bill Clinton!

I do have a wisp of sympathy for those disillusioned Sanders supporters, honestly, I was a very religious Catholic and parting ways with Mother Church had its harsh moments. But here’s the rub, American electoral politics at the national level are simply far too corrupt to affect real change. We have not had a legitimate election probably since Richard Nixon put in the fix in 1968. By the time Ronald Reagan came around, everything was stage managed. Obama, for all his achievements, was less of a political scientist and more of a rock star, and that primary contest in 2008 against Hillary Clinton was closer to American Idol than American democracy.

If you want to see real change in our world, you need to do it the old-fashioned way, by working in collaboration with others to create structures that might be able to stand in for the corrupt old ways of the world, you can’t affect change from the voting booth, FaceBook, or the internet. This is about solidarity and forging cross-cultural alliances.

Perhaps one place to begin would be with the #BlackLivesMatter folks. They have just unveiled a platform with a series of tenable, real policy solutions to curb police violence. And the perfect group to promote that platform are the progressives now flocked around Bernie Sanders, they have the resources, the finances, and the sense of morality that can help BLM flourish.

Only then, united as one, could perhaps a real revolutionary movement come about to change things. But that would require something akin to rewriting the American Constitution itself.

Movie Review: ANITA


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anita posterFreida Lee Mock’s ANITA (2013) is a trip back in time to one of the most important moments in the advancement of feminist issues in that past quarter century and a memento of that time the Culture Wars came to the Senate. After years of the name ‘Anita Hill’ being a tagline, we get the inside story of a woman who dared to buck a tremendously powerful trend and ended up sparking a dialogue that continues to this day.

THURSDAY: RINOW SCREENS ‘ANITA’ AT CABLE CAR CINEMA

Today Clarence Thomas is that strange man on the Supreme Court who has remained almost totally mute for his entire career, never asking questions of either lawyer arguing a case before him and delivering opinions that seem to be in competition with Scalia for the most outrageous. Whether it has been helping get George W. Bush into the White House or opposing gay marriage, Thomas is a monolith whose status as a black man has befuddled most African Americans disadvantaged by his rulings.

However, back when he was nominated by George H.W. Bush to replace Thurgood Marshall, the first black Justice to sit on the Court, the media storm that erupted over his selection was intense. Towards the end of Thomas’s confirmation hearings, an FBI interview with Prof. Anita Hill was leaked. Hill, then a law professor at University of Oklahoma College of Law, alleged that he had sexually harassed her multiple times in his capacity as her boss at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the government body that is responsible for law regarding equity in the workplace, including gender/sex discrimination and harassment.

In October 1991, Hill went before the Senate Judiciary Committee and testified to what happened. The Committee, made up of all white men who had no idea how to handle issues around sexual harassment, fell all over each other and made complete fools of themselves. Joe Biden, the chairman, failed to call other women to testify about Thomas’s similar behavior towards them, resulting in a case of he said/she said instead of the exposure of a pattern of misconduct. Orrin Hatch took his chance to speak as an opportunity to grill the witness and try to impugn her testimony. Ted Kennedy, who had previously scuttled the nomination of Robert Bork with great aplomb, looked like a deer caught in headlights in a time when he was still featured in the tabloids for boozing and womanizing. And as the finishing touch, they let Thomas’s rebuttal descend into a self-important instance of pulling the race card unto the point they simply had to confirm him. As a result, we have been stuck with him ever since.

But the film does not end there. Instead, it follows Hill back to Oklahoma, where she was continually harassed by right wing nuts. At one point they tried to get her fired despite the fact she was tenured, then they turned around and went after first her dean and then the law school itself. Eventually she moved on to Brandeis, where she has been teaching ever since, while the unwanted 15 minutes of fame ended up becoming Hill’s second calling, leading her to become a longtime speaker and advocate for women’s rights and workplace discrimination.

Ultimately, this film is a good one. The first half, based around Hill’s memories of the two decades passed Culture War event, is well-developed and has moments not unlike the classic Emile de Antonio film about the Army-McCarthy hearings POINT OF ORDER. However, the final segment, having to do with her modern life, is just a tad too much of a happy ending for me. Ever since Michael Moore hit it big with BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE and FAHRENHEIT 9/11, documentaries have become a major force in the film market. But part of that has entailed the institutionalization of a type of three act structure, concluding with a neat bow and a happy ending, that I simply don’t like.

Sexual violence against women and girls is a serious topic that continues to affect our culture, which itself is called ‘rape culture’ for a reason. In many ways, life for professional women has improved tremendously, including in the realm of sexual harassment policies. But for poor and underprivileged women, things are far from ideal. Just this month we have found ourselves yet again dealing with another cheap attempt by the anti-choice contingent to defund Planned Parenthood. A woman’s access to abortion and low-cost obstetric services are severely hindered by the legacy of two Bush terms.

This is a serious problem, one that we need to be concerned about, and I don’t like happy endings being propped up despite those facts. When Emile de Antonio made his film about Vietnam, IN THE YEAR OF THE PIG (1968), he didn’t close it out with a smile and a nod, he left an open, hanging question for the audience that practically dared them to do something about our policies in Southeast Asia. With this movie, the viewer can walk out of the theater feeling like this is a finished problem, which it is not.

Despite promises, sports stadiums are not ‘revenue neutral’


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providence-stadium-rendering-april-2015I have previously written about PawSox owner Larry Lucchino’s public/private partnerships’ in building PetCo Park for the San Diego Padres and Camden Yards for the Baltimore Orioles. These are the two major projects that Lucchino’s spokesman Dr. Charles Steinberg boasts about on the so-called ‘Listening Tour’ the team has been holding across the state. I will now conclude this series with a brief discussion of several different stadiums, their funding schemes, and the resulting impacts on the surrounding communities.

Let’s begin with Fenway Park. According to the City of Boston Tax Assessor’s online portal, team owner John W. Henry owns four parcels of land that are affiliated with the Red Sox organization, properties he pays very substantial taxes to the city on, as seen below.

  • Fenway Park, Parcel ID 0504203000, FY2015 Total Assessed Value of $81,413,223.00, FY2016 Preliminary (Estimated) Total Tax Due $1,201,659.17 based on First Half of FY16 (Q1 + Q2), or predicted total FY16 Taxes of $2,403,318.34
  • 2 Yawkey Way, Parcel ID 0504199000, FY2015 Total Assessed Value of $5,526,206.00, FY2016 Preliminary (Estimated) Total Tax Due $81,566.80 based on First Half of FY16 (Q1 + Q2), or predicted total FY16 Taxes of $163,133.60
  • 12 Lansdowne Street, Parcel ID 0504200010, FY2015 Total Assessed Value of $16,557,920.00, FY2016 Preliminary (Estimated) Total Tax Due $244,394.90 based on First Half of FY16 (Q1 + Q2), or predicted total FY16 Taxes of $488,789.80
  • Brookline Avenue, Parcel ID 2100066000, FY2015 Total Assessed Value of $5,992,000.00, FY2016 Preliminary (Estimated) Total Tax Due $88,441.92 based on First Half of FY16 (Q1 + Q2), or predicted total FY16 Taxes of $176,883.84
    • Subtotal FY16 Predicted Taxes Due: $3,232,125.58

At the time of the original PawSox stadium proposal, the ownership claimed that their bid for a tax-free property was a reasonable and standard arrangement. This and other matters detailed below will demonstrate just how blatantly untrue that claim was and remains.

Consider the funding of the New England Patriots. When Gillette Stadium opened in 2002, it was a project that team owner Robert Kraft had asked for no public aid in commissioning or constructing. For an article surveying the costs of various venues in the Massachusetts, Bruce Mohl and Jack Sullivan wrote for CommonWealth Magazine:

Gillette Stadium in Foxborough also pays about $2 million, but not in the form of property taxes. Randy Scollins, Fox­borough’s finance director, says the town owns the land underneath the stadium under an arrangement set up in the early 1970s to help lure the NFL team to the area… Under the arrangement, the Patriots make in-lieu-of-tax payments to the town funded by ticket fees paid by fans. Foxborough receives $1.42 for every ticket sold to soccer and football games and $2.46 for every ticket sold to concerts and other special events.
Scollins says the ticket fees are likely less than what the town would receive if the stadium paid property taxes, but he says it’s an arrangement that has worked well, particularly since the Kraft family has opened Patriot Place near the stadium, adding significantly to the town’s tax base.

The Patriots are not a tax-exempt organization and this past March, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced the NFL would be giving up its 501 (c) 3 status entirely.

But there is one interesting exception to that rule, the Green Bay Packers. The team is the only not-for-profit, publicly-owned major sports franchise in America, as laid out in a New Yorker Magazine article several years ago. According to this 1999 report from the Wisconsin legislature, the team has an interesting ownership and management diagram:

Approximately 109,700 individuals own shares of Packers common stock but do not receive dividends or profits as a result of stock ownership. The shareholders elect the Packers’ 45-member board of directors, whose members serve staggered three-year terms. The board appoints seven of its members to an executive committee that is responsible for monitoring operations, which includes hiring and evaluating the performance of the president and chief executive officer.

The New Yorker article by Dave Zirin is impressive and worth reading in full, but this quote especially stunned me:

Volunteers work concessions, with sixty per cent of the proceeds going to local charities. Even the beer is cheaper than at a typical N.F.L. stadium. Not only has home field been sold out for two decades, but during snowstorms, the team routinely puts out calls for volunteers to help shovel and is never disappointed by the response.

If one examines the Articles of Incorporation of the team itself, they state clearly that the actual act of playing football is merely incidental to its true mission, “a community project intended to promote community welfare and that its purposes shall be exclusively charitable“. In this 2012 paper for the Oregon State Bar Nonprofit Organizations Law Section, Bay Toft-Dupuy writes:

Guided by the nonprofit nature of its organizational articles and community ownership structure, the Packers operate in an arguably nonprofit fashion. All profits are either invested back in the team or donated to local charities with a six million dollar impact reported in 2012 for one fiscal year alone.

Staying in Wisconsin for a moment, there is a recent article by Michael Powell at the New York Times regarding the Milwaukee Bucks that shows what happens when a sports team talking like Lucchino gets its way:

We’ll keep the Bucks in Milwaukee, the owners said, if the public foots half the cost of a $500 million arena. (The owners spoke of their “moral obligation” to the city and pledged $100 million toward their arena, with the remainder coming from other private funds.) N.B.A. officials acted as muscle for the owners and warned that if Wisconsin did not cough up this money within a year’s time, the league would move the team to Las Vegas or Seattle… Gov. Scott Walker signed a bill Wednesday to subsidize the arena, which could cost the public twice as much as originally projected… Milwaukee County’s portion of arena debt amounts to $4 million annually for 20 years; if the county fails to come up with its payments, the state could deduct the money from annual aid to the county. Abele has spoken of scrounging up the county’s payment by allowing the state to crack down on the county’s many debtors. That sounds fine in theory. In practice, it could mean hounding working-class homeowners for property taxes or pursuing residents who have delinquent ambulance bills. No county can afford to let taxes go uncollected, but that strategy registers as a touch repellent. [Emphasis added]

As the discussion of stadium building has become a national conversation, thanks in part to a recent piece featured on HBO’s Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, the conversation has now evolved to the point where Gigi Douban of Marketplace Business asked in an August 13 piece whether funding a sports complex is an investment or a subsidy.

When a government pours money into a sports venue, sometimes it’s hard to tell whether it’s a subsidy or an investment, Mark Rosentraub, sport management professor at the University of Michigan, says.
“It becomes an investment when there’s a clearly defined set of returns that are worth the risk of any investment,” he says.
Rosentraub says if the arena anchors a bigger redevelopment plan, that’s when it tends to make a city money. But arenas alone don’t equal jobs and new businesses, especially in a quiet city like Milwaukee, according to Andrew Zimbalist, economics professor at Smith College.
“If you’re hoping to promote the local economy by attracting or keeping a basketball team,” he says, “it’s not something that happens.”

Jason Notte over at MarketWatch wrote a piece on July 21 I encourage you to read in full but which I will summarize. Titled 5 CITIES GETTING THE WORST DEALS FROM SPORTS TEAMS, he tells the tale of woe for Milwaukee and four other municipalities that are getting the raw deal from major sports. Minneapolis was promised they would only pay $500 million but are now on the hook for $678 million for a new arena for the Minnesota Vikings. Cobb County, Georgia is borrowing $397 million from the funds for infrastructure and education so to give the Braves baseball team a new home. Glendale, Arizona, a sports mecca, is forking over $308 million for the Arizona Cardinals football team, $225 million for the Arizona Coyotes hockey team, they paid millions more for spring training sites used by the White Sox and Dodgers, and lost money hosting the 2008 Super Bowl, with more losses predicted for this year’s big game. Finally in the District of Columbia, residents are paying $150 million to keep the DC United soccer club from heading to the suburbs, funds that are coming out of badly-needed school renovation line items.

Beth Comery of Providence Daily Dose posted a story on July 29 called ATTENTION JORGE: MAYORS EVERYWHERE SAYING NO TO STADIUMS where, taking off from the recent move by Boston Mayor Marty Walsh in effectively canceling the Boston Olympics, she strongly hints that approving a stadium might be political poison if the Mayor Elorza hops on the bandwagon. It’s a pretty well-duh statement to say that Nicholas Mattiello has reached the highest point in his career, his anti-choice, pro-austerity, and anti-gun control stances would never fly with the DNC, who help fund national House and Senate races. But Gina Raimondo and Jorge Elorza do not strike me as anywhere near finished with their ascendancies. If they wish to hold onto votes with the ever-valuable East Side of Providence, folks who are also known for their wonderful campaign fundraisers, and the fiscally-cautious hinterlands of Cranston, Warwick, Johnston, and South County, they need to show some real strategy and weigh their options. Do they obey the wishes of the PawSox owners and fold, potentially stamping a noticeable black mark on their records, or do they follow the great unwashed masses who will one day be deciding if they keep their jobs?

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Tuesday to Tuesday Arts and entertainment calendar: Aug 18


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calvary_bigIt is our hope that this new feature – the ‘Tuesday to Tuesday Arts and Entertainment Calendar’ will bring a lighter side to the fare. As we move into the dog days of summer, I’m open to tips and press releases regarding the events you or someone you know may be holding in the next few weeks. Feel free to e-mail data to me at andrew.james.stewart.rhode.island@gmail.com.

MY PICKS
Here is my selection of events that you should definitely consider checking out this week.

  • 8/18
    Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6
    It’s an odd choice, yes, but why not learn a skill that has some value and can make your soul perk?
  • 8/19
    MOVIES ON THE ROCKS: Star Trek Generations at Ballard Park Quarry Meadow, Dusk (8:15-8:30), Free
    This was the first film featuring the cast of THE NEXT GENERATION and it was not exactly great. However, watching it projected in a quarry can’t be awful.
  • 8/20
    Free Speech Thursdays Presents: Providence Poetry Slam at AS220 Main Stage, 8 pm, $4
    I love AS220 poets, they never fail to amaze.
  • 8/21
    Sometimes You Just Need A Friend: A Suicide Prevention Benefit (NAMI) at Firehouse 13, 8 pm, $10
    I’m an advocate of mental healthcare issues by default and would urge people to get involved in this sort of work.
  • 8/22
    2015 WBRU Rock Hunt Winner Public Alley With Special Guests Kooked Out & Seven Hats Parade at the Met, 8 pm, $8 Advance/$10 Day Of
    With such an award-winning act, what explanation do you need?
  • 8/23
    Benefit For Chris Marks: Black Oil Incinerator, The Worried, and Tenafly Vipers at Dusk, 5 pm, $5 Sugg. Donation
    I also have a special spot for these types of crowd-funding for helping those in need and think this is worth some time.
  • 8/24
    An Evening With Neil Degrasse Tyson at PPAC, 7:30 pm, $55-$80
    I love this guy’s work and think it is a worthwhile time. Science is an amazing thing and will continue to play an important part in our life as we face the challenges of climate change.
  • 8/25
    Boot Leg Soul, John Paul Colasante, Not for Coltrane at AS220 Main Stage, 9:30 pm, $6
    I’m closing out the week with this random concert because I believe in the value AS220 has to the community.

8/18
Pianos Become The Teeth, The World Is A Beautiful Place & I am No Longer Afraid To Die, Turnover, Take One Car at The Met, Doors 7 pm/Show 8 pm, $15 Advance/$17 Day Of

Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 12-1 pm, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Volcano Kings, Trigger, Wei Zhongle, + New Bliss at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, $6 (Free with RISD/Brown ID)

S. Wolcott, No Time, Wasted, Decent Souls + a surprise appearance! at AS220 Main Stage, 9:30 pm, $6

8/19
MOVIES ON THE ROCKS: Star Trek Generations at Ballard Park Quarry Meadow, Dusk (8:15-8:30), Free

Music at Sunset – Panoramic View at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 6 pm, Member $7, Non-Member $10

Vinyasa Yoga with Julie Shore at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, Noon-1 pm, $5

Open Level Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30-8 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Intro to the Darkroom at AS220 Media Arts, 7 pm, $120

The Vox Hunters, Lindsay Straw, Russ Connors, and The Quahogs at AS220 Main Stage, 8:30, $8

Ad.Ul.T, I Eat Rocks, Trashbirds, Xr-Tabs At Dusk, 9 pm,

8/20
RI NOW, The National Coalition of 100 Black Women –RI Chapter, and the PVD Lady Project Present:ANITA at Cable Car, 6:30, $5-$10 Sugg. Donation

Matuto at The Towers, 7 pm, $15

Project Beta: NY to Newport Public Art Exhibition at Long’s Yoga Room, 7 pm, Free

newportFILM Outdoors + Green Screen! RACING EXTINCTION at Belle Mer, 8 pm, Free (Suggested Donation $5)

Intro to Letterpress at AS220 Printshop, 6 pm, $175

Evening Yoga at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:15 pm, $13 per class; $60 for 6 classes

Free Speech Thursdays Presents: Providence Poetry Slam at AS220 Main Stage, 8 pm, $4

Movies on the Block: BLOOD SIMPLE at Grants Block, 7:30 pm, Free

2015 Burnside Music Series! Up Next: Vio/Mire + DJ Analog Underground, Greater Kennedy Plaza, Free

Ars Necronomica & Rhode Island Eerie Openings at Providence Art Club, 6:30 pm, Free

NecronomiCon Providence at a variety of locations, Multi-Day, $75 (http://necronomicon-providence.com/welcome/)

Lovecraft’s 125th Birthday – Outdoor concert and film screening at 35 Weybosset St, 7 pm, Free

8/21
LGBT Elders Cafe at Church of the Transfiguration, Noon, $3 60+, $6 Under 60 (RSVP with Pauline at 401-351-6700)

Family Fun Friday – Karen K and the Jitterbugs at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, Noon, Included with admission. Free for members

Jodi Jolt & The Volt, GrandEvolution, Nymphidels, Jamie Craighead, Ben Tirrell at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

Sometimes You Just Need A Friend: A Suicide Prevention Benefit (NAMI) at Firehouse 13, 8 pm, $10

8/22
The Looff: East Providence Art Festival at 700 Bullocks Point Ave, 10 am-8 pm, Free

Field of Artisans at Marina Park, 11 am-4 pm, Free

Introduction to the Laser Cutter at AS220 Labs, 10 am, $80

Introduction to the CNC Router at AS220 Labs, 2 pm, $100

Traditional Irish Music Session at AS220 Bar & FOO(D), 4 pm, Free

2015 WBRU Rock Hunt Winner Public Alley With Special Guests Kooked Out & Seven Hats Parade at the Met, 8 pm, $8 Advance/$10 Day Of

The Sweet Release/Neutral Nation/The Z-Boys at The Parlour, 9 pm, $5

8/23
Core Workout with Daniel Shea at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 9 am, $5

Beginner Ballet at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 10:30, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Intermediate Ballet w/ Stephanie Albanese at 95 Empire Dance Studio, Noon, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Benefit For Chris Marks: Black Oil Incinerator, The Worried, and Tenafly Vipers at Dusk, 5 pm, $5 Sugg. Donation

Mis(S)Invader, Nervous System, Polluter, and Tomb And Thirst at Firehouse 13, 8 pm, $6

8/24
Intermediate/Advanced Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Over the Top, a reading of a performed memorial by David Higgins and Vanessa Gilbert at AS220’s Blackbox, 7 pm, Free but donations accepted

An Evening With Neil Degrasse Tyson at PPAC, 7:30 pm, $55-$80

8/25
Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 12-1 pm, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Single Lash, Future Museums, Pixels, + Twenty Four Hours at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, $5

Boot Leg Soul, John Paul Colasante, Not for Coltrane at AS220 Main Stage, 9:30 pm, $6

Lucchino’s bad business in Baltimore


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Camden Yards, Baltimore, one of Larry Lucchino's so-called 'successes'.
Camden Yards, Baltimore, one of Larry Lucchino’s so-called ‘successes’.

Previously I posted a story about PawSox owner Larry Lucchino’s luck in San Diego with PetCo Park, host venue of the Padres. But make no mistake, San Diego was no aberration. A simple Google search shows that Camden Yards, also touted by PawSox Listening Tour doyen Dr. Larry Steinberg as a stellar success, has been everything but.

In fact, the home field of the Orioles was cited by the right-libertarian magazine Reason as “a symbol of downtown-development delusion.” You know there is definitely something amiss when a magazine known for unabashed love of Ayn Rand is throttling the billionaire class.

Let us begin with the aforementioned Reason article. In the name of full disclosure, I would be remiss if I did not say I am opposed to its ethos and find the political economy it subscribes to simply illogical. But with that said, they are pretty rough here on Lucchino’s Camden Yards, going as far as blaming the subsidy to the Orioles for the protests that took place last spring in the wake of the death of Freddie Gray at the hands of the police, writing “those looking for a villain in Baltimore’s economic woes may want to fix their gaze up at the owner’s box[.]” The author writes further:

Today Camden Yards, the ballyhooed baseball stadium in downtown Baltimore, will feature something never before seen in the century-plus history of Major League Baseball: an official game played with not a single paying spectator in sight…It’s no surprise that Camden Yards would play such an important symbolic role in the ongoing civic breakdown of Baltimore. The stadium has long been the prototype for showering tax dollars on millionaire sports owners in the name of spurring downtown urban renewal.

In November 2013, Bloomberg Business‘s Darrell Preston, Aaron Kuriloff, and Rodney Yap filed a report on Oriole Park. The picture they painted less than two years before the imagery we saw broadcast on television last spring was dire. A report that was heavy on the numbers, the long quote I am including here has a significant amount of gravity. Titling their piece REBIRTH ELUDES BALTIMORE AS CAMDEN REALITY LAGS PROMISES, they wrote:

Camden Yards also launched a trend of placing stadiums in the middle of cities in an attempt at redevelopment, as public officials nationwide mistook its appeal as a sports venue for success as a development catalyst, said Tim Chapin, chairman of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at Florida State University. In fact, he said, the widespread belief that Camden Yards launched a rebirth in downtown Baltimore isn’t true…Camden Yards now borders neighborhoods where the number of employers is lower than in 1998, six years after it opened… Unemployment is rising in these areas, as are their rankings against other neighborhoods for violent crime and the percentage of properties in foreclosure. By 2011, the stadium area was home to fewer businesses than in 1998, according to census data. The zip codes around Baltimore’s stadiums saw a 7.8 percent drop in the number of businesses from 1998 to 2011.

That final point is important to note because the PawSox are promising that their new stadium will be a catalyst for development, whereas the record shows the exact opposite. As I have also noted previously, the parcels chosen by the PawSox have already been designated not just as a public park but as an important site for waste water mitigation, the hinge of an all-important master permit that will shorten development times significantly. If that permit is voided, that could result in the I-195 land remaining vacant. And it seems from these accounts that Lucchino has a long-standing habit of causing just that.

To close out, here is an article from The Baltimore Sun in 2012. Titled WAS CAMDEN YARDS WORTH IT?, the prognosis is an astounding negative. And what is especially impressive is the apt comparison the authors make to Boston and Fenway Park, something that might be a tad relevant to this discussion also.

None of the cities that banked on downtown “stadium stimuli” have reversed their population losses. Between 2000 and 2010, Baltimore lost 30,193 residents (4.6 percent of its population), St. Louis, 28,895 (8.3 percent), Pittsburgh, 28,859 (8.6 percent), Cincinnati, 34,340 (10.4 percent), Cleveland, 81,588 (17.1 percent), and Detroit, 237,493 (24.9 percent). Meanwhile, some cities that have refused to subsidize stadiums have fared much better. Consider Boston…There, the baseball team plays in a 100-year-old ballpark that is privately owned by a property tax-paying entity…Boston city proper is much healthier and more vibrant than Baltimore City precisely because, three decades ago, Boston took a more organic approach to urban renewal…From 1947 to 1972, manufacturing jobs declined by 43 percent in Boston versus 25 percent in Baltimore. From 1950 to 1980, Boston’s population fell 30 percent compared to Baltimore’s 17 percent…By 1975, Boston’s crime rate was higher than Baltimore’s, and by 1979, Boston’s median household income was lower than Baltimore’s. But in 1980, Massachusetts voters passed Proposition 2 1/2 , forcing Boston to cut its effective property tax rate by an estimated 75 percent within two years. …While Boston has 10 percent more residents than it had in 1980, Baltimore has 21 percent fewer. Boston’s inflation-adjusted median household income rose 51 percent between 1979 and 2009, but Baltimore’s grew only 2 percent. We continue to struggle with high poverty rates and tens of thousands of properties that are vacant or in disrepair.

Dr. Steinberg has consistently claimed that, when Larry Lucchino showed up in Boston, he was a major figure in opposing the replacement of Fenway Park. Anyone familiar with that movement knows that is a little bit of a stretch, in fact the SAVE FENWAY campaign was a grassroots effort that got a big boost when BoSox players also took up the cause. But it is also pretty obvious for an outside observer that the city officials of Boston probably just balked at Lucchino’s requests in light of their progressive tax code and host of regulations. It remains to be seen if Rhode Island will follow the example of Boston from either two decades ago, when they decided to preserve Fenway, or just this past month, when Mayor Marty Walsh refused to pay the tab for the International Olympic Committee.

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Larry Lucchino’s losing record in San Diego


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PawSox owner Larry Lucchino.

Last week when I sat down to talk with Dan Yorke, one point he brought up was that stadium opponents have their hands tied until Speaker Mattiello releases the terms of the new deal he is working with the PawSox ownership. I agree with that, but with one caveat: there is always the paper trail to indicate what direction things are going in. Larry Lucchino is a veteran player in the baseball stadium construction game, so the idea he might deviate from a long line of tricks and tropes is highly dubious.

The current word from Speaker Mattiello’s office is that this will be a ‘revenue-neutral’ or ‘revenue-positive’ deal, a very slippery set of words. But Arlene Violet hammers it home in a piece for The Valley Breeze:

[T]he taxpayer is now being serenaded by the House Speaker with a sweet tune that any proposal would have to be “revenue neutral.” It’s a great soundbite but devoid of reality. In their book “The Field of Schemes,” authors Neil de Mause and Joanna Cagan expose this ploy and the steps taken as the project unfolds to shift costs and risks to the public while the rich welfare recipients turn the public money into private profit.

That does not bode well for Messrs Lucchino and Mattiello. But if one looks into Petco Park, one of the highly-touted ‘success’ stories on Lucchino’s resume, a site that Dr. Steinberg consistently cited in his Listening Tour presentations, the prognosis is dire. While affiliated with the San Diego Padres in the late 1990’s, Lucchino was able to push through a deal that was funded by publicly-approved bonds, Proposition C, called a ‘public-private partnership’ back then also. However, due to both a budget crunch and fiscal restructuring under California state law, the taxpayers were left on the hook facing a debt of up to $271 million. And it appears that Lucchino has not changed his tune over the past two decades. If one visits another story from the San Diego Reader titled CHARGERS: LOOK AT PETCO PARK FAILURE (how encouraging!), the comments section is illuminating.

Oh, the lies that were told in that 1998 election! The ballpark was to be revenue neutral; hotel tax receipts would service the bonds. Bureaucrats later admitted to a grand jury that they had been pressured to jiggle those numbers to make it look like TOT revenues would service the bonds. [Emphasis added]

In fact, as this slideshow presentation for the book PARADISE PLUNDERED: FISCAL CRISIS AND GOVERNANCE FAILURES IN SAN DIEGO (sounds cheery!), Petco Park not only failed to be ‘revenue-neutral’, it contributed in no small fashion to a major fiscal emergency for the city, resulting in austerity measures and cuts to pensions and public services. And considering Rhode Island has already done those things, one is left with only morbid fantasies to explain what might be offered up next. Will we put state heirlooms on the auction block or perhaps cut to the chase and sell the children into debt bondage?

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Is it climate change o’clock yet?


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Earth, 2037, map by that radical leftist outfit National Geographic.

Over 30 years ago, activist Larry Kramer, disgusted by the apathy of public officials and the timidity of gay men who refused to come out, wrote a blistering article called 1,112 AND COUNTING.

Kramer was furious at Ronald Reagan, who refused to say the word AIDS, New York Mayor Ed Koch, a closet-case who wouldn’t be seen within a hundred miles of anything remotely to do with homosexuality, the CDC, which was giving pittances to AIDS researchers, and Gay Men’s Health Crisis, a group he had founded and then witnessed descend into a puddle of politically-correct mush. Many historians of the epidemic see Kramer’s dispatch as the moment when people woke up and said that, unless they got into the street and began making noise, there was a real chance AIDS could become the Bubonic Plague.

We need an article like that now for climate change. The first lines of Kramer’s writing read:

If this article doesn’t scare the sh*t out of you, we’re in real trouble. If this article doesn’t rouse you to anger, fury, rage, and action, gay men may have no future on this earth. Our continued existence depends on just how angry you can get… I repeat: Our continued existence as gay men upon the face of this earth is at stake. Unless we fight for our lives, we shall die. In all the history of homosexuality we have never before been so close to death and extinction. Many of us are dying or already dead.

And such is the case with climate change now. I just got my electricity back on yesterday after that freak storm that struck Tuesday morning. I was aware the night before that there was a thunder storm predicted, so I closed my windows. When it hit that morning at 6, my jaw hit the floor and I was terrified. That was not just a storm, it was a catastrophe that happened because of global warming.

I am uncertain if this is a correct diagnosis, and I welcome the critique of a meteorologist, but here’s what I think happened: for weeks now we have been reading about bizarre things like fish washing up on the shores by the hundreds, dead from suffocation and water temperature. I recently heard a climate scientist on NPR talking about how the waters of Cape Cod this season are the warmest he has ever experienced. I think that, when the storm passed over the Narragansett Bay, it sucked up a lot of heat generated by the warm water. Warm air generated by water is like a massive dose of anabolic steroids for weather, it turns normal storms into monstrosities. In 2005, the warm air generated by the Gulf of Mexico smashed into the bottom of Hurricane Katrina and resulted in a regular hurricane transforming New Orleans into a war zone. That’s the same principle I think was at work here.

And yet after we get smashed upside the heads by a gigantic warning to reduce our carbon footprint, people continue to create aforementioned footprint, if not doubling it. Around my neighborhood, the night air was abuzz with the sputtering of gas-powered generators. Others would sit in their running cars to charge their phones and use the air conditioner. When a child touches a hot stove, they get a clue and don’t do it again. But with climate change, we don’t stop touching the stove, we thrust our hands into the white-hot center of the fire!

It’s not like we do not know what to do, there are plenty of examples in Europe, Canada, and California that lead the way. We could increase our number of wind turbines, the government could sponsor a proliferation of solar panels for homes and municipalities, there could be geothermal, hydroelectric, and all sorts of sustainable energy projects that would give high-paying, long-lasting jobs to both white- and blue-collar workers.

To extend the AIDS analogy one step further, Kramer later dramatized his experiences with AIDS in a play, THE NORMAL HEART, which was made into a HBO film last year starring Mark Ruffalo. Ruffalo, a man of deep principles and morals, has created a non-profit, The Solutions Project, where he offers sustainable energy plans for every state. According to his website, Rhode Island has a lot of progress to make. We have a power grid consisting of 4.4% residential solar panels, 17.8% solar PV plants, 10% onshore wind, 0.1% hydroelectric, and 0% geothermal. There would be 7,473 construction jobs and 5,775 operation jobs created by the transition to a sustainable power grid.

And it’s not like there aren’t financial benefits immediately to be seen from installing solar panels on your house. Did you know there is a mechanism you can install so that, in the day, after charging the battery that will power your house during the night, you can feed the excess energy back into the power grid, reducing your electrical bill to almost nothing per month? Teddy Roosevelt was a lot of things, but one of those things was a conservationist and environmentalist. He saw the basic logic of environmentalism not just as a matter of what we leave our progeny but also as a matter of fiscal conservatism and responsibility. He knew that, if you do the right thing and don’t pollute, you end up saving both yourself and the government money. He created the Food and Drug Administration not just so to stop people from eating bad food and taking tainted medicine, he did it to prevent lawsuits against the vendors, a real type of tort reform that these lunatic Tea Partiers would call state socialism!

But what do we get instead? Gina Raimondo opening a power plant operating on fracked natural gas while President Obama’s uber-hyped “clean energy plan” in fact only phases out coal while maintaining natural gas mining! What changed? These politicians are servants of the power companies that fund their campaigns. They do not care. Get over the delusion that the Dismal Dollar Democrats are serious about climate issues, they aren’t. I voted not twice but three times for President Obama, first in the primary contest against Hillary Clinton and then in both the 2008 and 2012 general elections. I had deep-seated hopes for him as both the first African-American president and as someone who said he was going to change Washington.

But instead, he has been a Clinton Democrat who has defenestrated environmental laws and allowed our fossil fuel fanaticism to fester unchallenged. He could have passed an executive order any day of the week to stop fracking. But instead, his appointees at the Environmental Protection Agency recently issued a piece of quackery about how fracking does not affect drinking water, flying in the face of a consensus that the chemicals used in that horrid process are carcinogens! Richard Nixon was a monster responsible for despicable crimes, but he would seem like a flaming liberal, if not an outright Red, when comparing his policies on pollution with the pack of lunatics at the helm now.

If we don’t get this thing under control not very soon but now, we are going to all suffer terrible consequences. The polar ice melt, already in process, is going to raise the sea level so drastically that by 2037 Rhode Island, if it still exists at all, will be a string of hilltop islands peaking out of the water, with Providence either totally submerged or functioning in a method not unlike Venice. The Ocean State will have a year-round temperature akin to Georgia. And the midwest, our breadbasket and source of most of the food on our tables, is going to be a desert not unlike the Sahara! These days we rue how our grain silos store surpluses of grain and corn that could feed the hungry, but those days are numbered, we are going to face a massive food and water shortage emergency before I am sixty years of age. If you want a preview of what is going to come, look at the genocide in Sudan and Darfur, that multi-decade nightmare was caused at its root by droughts brought on by climate change.

Our continued existence as human beings upon the face of this earth is at stake. Unless we fight for our lives, we shall die. In all the history of humanity we have never before been so close to death and extinction. Many of us are dying or already dead. 

In the wake of Larry Kramer’s disappointment with Gay Men’s Health Crisis, he did two things. First, he went on a long vacation and wrote THE NORMAL HEART, a deeply affecting play derived from the finest tradition of agit-prop. Second, he formed the AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power (ACT-UP). They were mortally terrified young men and women who were fighting for their lives, so they didn’t care what the consequences were so long as they got results. It is not my place here to call for any type of law breaking, and I furthermore admire Bill McKibben’s People’s Climate March. The Pope is now coming to America to make an address about climate change at the UN as a follow-up to his ground-breaking encyclical. The G7 just made a vow to end fossil fuel consumption totally by the end of the century. But there are simple steps we as humans need to make to affect change. Here’s what I do, I am not going to suggest anything I don’t practice because it is hypocritical if I only preach it.

  • Become a vegetarian.
    Veganism is hard and I have yet to get that far. But the facts are simple, it takes more electricity to store and prepare animal products. If you give up meat alone, you are making a serious impact on the level of fossil fuels you consume. And what’s more, you also can do yourself serious good. Studies are now showing a link between depression and eating meat, probably having to do with the amount of hormones and other junk they pump animals up with these days.
  • Ride a bike and public transportation.
    Again, you not only decrease the amount of fossil fuels you consume, you give your body a major work-out. Exercise is also shown to help benefit your mood and productivity.
  • Recycle more.
    Most of us probably separate the newspaper and bottles and put them in the green bin already, but we might be missing a few things. For example, how many recyclable paper items do you throw into the trash in your bathroom? I have made it a habit of digging out the cardboard toilet paper cores and bar soap wrappers, which are made of either paperboard or recyclable paper. Take the extra time to rinse out used plastic food storage bags and put them in the recycling bin. What about the plastic bag your loaf of bread comes in? You would be surprised at the number of items you find in the trash that belong in the green bin.
  • Monitor the amount of electricity you use.
    There are so man little things that reduce your power consumption. Unplug things like phone chargers when they are not in use. Reduce the brightness on your computer monitor. Change the settings in your computer to moderate whether disk drives are powered when not in use. Use fluorescent or LED bulbs in your lights. Turn off your computer when not in use. These little steps lead to a long journey of responsible power consumption.
  • Share this information.
    If you can get people to also follow these steps, they results could be astounding.

The results that are already guaranteed to take place because of climate change are terrible. There is no stopping some of it. But at the same times, human beings are magnificent creatures that have never failed to survive in the most dire straits. The flooding of 2037 could be catastrophic, but it also could be hindered if we adopt some of the dike and dam practices used for centuries by the Dutch. We could also in that time adapt out buildings to prepare for the inundation and create high structures to house people. And, if we are lucky, we could end up recreating our species in the face of this catastrophe. I just recently read on CounterPunch an article about a type of organic farming that pulls carbon out of the air, something that shows great promise. But we cannot rely on our leaders for this. It is going to require a lot of small-d democratic work to create the groundswell necessary.

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The next POTUS very well might be a Republican


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August 6, 2015 marked two historic events in television history. On Comedy Central was the final episode of Jon Stewart as anchor of The Daily Show, while Fox News held a Republican debate featuring (literally) front and center Donald Trump. It was a true challenge to attempt to discern what to watch, on the one hand you have one of the funniest human beings in the history of news media and on the other you have Jon Stewart. But lost in the flurry of self-congratulation is an important fact. This election could very well end with a Republican victory. That may go against conventional wisdom, but there are some very disturbing facts to consider.

First, as emphasized by a recent New York Times Magazine article, two major provisions of the historic Voting Rights Act, which turned 50 this week, Sections 4 and 5, were gutted in the 2013 Supreme Court case Shelby County v. Holder, provisions which provided federal oversight to voting districts with a history of disenfranchisement. As a result, these problematic sections of the country, some in key battleground states, are rolling out all types of ridiculous registration requirements that were abolished five decades ago, like literacy tests or voter identification laws. In another haunting development, the window of time for early voting has been decreased significantly, making submission of absentee ballots more difficult.

Already we have seen efforts to heighten voter registration by the Democrats, including Hillary Clinton’s push for enrollment on the campaign trail and David Cicilline’s proposed bill to automatically register people when they go to the DMV, but these are steps that may prove to be too little too late. The disenfranchisement movement has been hard at work for years now and already has one victory under their belt. The supposed default nominee of the Republicans, Jeb Bush, ran a test-run of voter purging as governor of Florida in 2000 that handed his brother those key electoral college votes and thus the election. In 2004, the state of Ohio was handed to Bush with a margin later found by a congressional report to have been rigged. There are now 34 states, including Rhode Island, that require identification at the polling place, cards which are hard to obtain for elder and minority voters who lack transport or time to get to the DMV.

But another fact that people need to consider is what will happen when people Feel The Bern-Out. I can respect the enthusiasm of those supporting Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, but there are no promises that he will gain the nomination, especially with key endorsements from labor and other groups having been sold to Hillary Clinton years ago. If Sanders loses the nomination, he has promised to direct his supporters to Clinton. But what is to guarantee they will follow his directions?

In 2000, traditional Democratic voters, disgusted with the Clintons and unimpressed by Al Gore, defected to the Green Party and cast ballots for Ralph Nader. This time around, the Greens are pushing an alternative first female president, Dr. Jill Stein, a woman of tremendous courage, intellect, and insight who lacks the finances necessary to buy this election. Some have even gone as far to argue that Nader votes were the reason traditional blue states went red in 2000. In our faux-democratic two-party plutocracy, there are not many things that differentiate neoliberals and neoconservatives. But in the minor places they do differ, such as in cases of choice, Affirmative Action, the environment, and labor, there is a dramatic impact to be seen. Already women’s rights are yet again on the chopping block, this time thanks to a series of deceptively edited undercover videos filmed by disciples of James O’Keefe, the ACORN video guru who successfully destroyed a non-profit whose only sin was holding voter registration drives. The entire field of Republican candidates knows that these videos are fake, but they are using them as talking points to boost their campaigns.

This is a foreshadowing of things yet to come should a Republican steal this election, something I worry could very well happen. And part of the fault will lie with the Democrats. Instead of relying on the old methods of gaining electoral victories, such as by hitting the pavement and going door-to-door to register voters, they are obsessing with the wonders of the internet and the myriad of ways they can shovel money into the trough of the Democrats. Lewis Black once had a brilliant comedy routine where he described the Republicans as the party of bad ideas and the Democrats as the party of no ideas. That seems to be coming true as we move towards election day. Instead of #FeelTheBern, it should be #FeelTheRegistrationForm.

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Why a public park, not a baseball stadium


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The original plan for the I-195 land, the green portions highlighted are the proposed locations of an open park.

There has been great talk of late centered around the protests against the stadium. I want to offer a few ideas here about the strategy being offered in Providence by those who are adamant that the parcel of land remain designated as an open space green park.

First, it is important to begin with where this park idea comes from. Section 42-64.14-5 of H 5994- AN ACT RELATING TO PUBLIC PROPERTY AND WORKS, the law passed in 2011, reads:

However, parcels P2 and P4, as delineated on that certain plan of land captioned “Improvements to Interstate Route 195, Providence, Rhode Island, Proposed Development Parcel Plans 1 through 10, Scale: 1”=20’, May 2010, Bryant Associates, Inc., Engineers-Surveyors-Construction Managers, Lincoln, RI, Maguire Group, Inc., Architects/Engineers/Planners, Providence, RI,” shall be developed and continued to be used as parks or park supporting activity provided, however, that the city of Providence shall not be responsible for the upkeep of the parks unless a memorandum of understanding is entered into between the commission or the state and the city of Providence that grants full funding to the city for that purpose.

To that extent, the taxpayers have already funded landscape architects who have been developing plans for the future park, as seen in this slideshow.

But besides this issue is one that will determine the future development of the rest of the I-195 land. The stadium proposal is throwing a major monkey wrench into the drafting of a master permit by Department of Environmental Management, the Coastal Resources Management Council, and the Narragansett Bay Commission “that would shorten the time it takes for developers to build on former Route 195 land,” as Kate Bramson of the ProJo reported on May 2. The open park is intended to also include a stormwater mitigation mechanism that would shorten building permit wait times significantly. Bramson’s piece had a few lines worth repeating, including a quote from Quonset Development Corporation’s managing director Steven King:

“In Rhode Island, time is a killer,” King said. “When you get bogged down, your business seeks the path of least resistance.”

Bramson went on to explain that, if the stadium were to be built, it could trigger a domino-like reaction where the various agencies involved would have to revise their portions of the master permit and perhaps lead to further delays in development of the land. This is something that could end up being a real threat to construction jobs in Providence because these three agencies are not known for being anything but stringent. One of the alternatives would include underground construction in a part of Providence already well-known for traffic jams or using another parcel of land as a park where a building could have been. When I recently asked Syd McKenna, co-host of the PawSox listening tour, about this issue, she shrugged and said they intend the stadium to have a grass field, ergo no worries. But that is not exactly the same thing, the underground foundation of the stadium could end up failing to meet the mitigation requirements.

Another point I would encourage the Providence opposition to focus their energies on is making the team publicize the terms of the deal. Right now, the owners are trying to push the idea of a contract that would be ‘revenue neutral’, but I am unsure if that is just Rhode Island-ese for tax breaks, subsidies, and public funding. The simple message should be four words, ‘Show Us The Deal‘. While I respect the efforts of the people in Providence, I am skeptical about sending a petition to City Council based on the Providence Home Rule Charter Section 209 because when this strategy was used last so to raise the minimum wage, the General Assembly voided it by passing a law to bar municipalities from doing so, something they have done multiple times before. If the City Council or State House were to void the petition, that would be a tremendously disenchanting. But by engaging in a PR blitz calling for nothing more or less radical than transparency and no tax breaks, subsidies, and public financing, there is a further chance for success. And incidentally, the financing is the meta-issue that will resolve all the others by default. The park, the master permit, and the host of other peripheral concerns will take care of themselves if the PawSox do not get the financing they want, it is as simple as that. Having attended most of the Listening Tour stops, I can report that the speakers are doing very well at adapting to answer the tiny concerns, such as now including the claim that the ownership will build an adjacent green park so to appease those focused solely on that topic, but they consistently stonewall when asked to disclose the terms of the deal they want. Every decent attorney knows that kind of silence is the sign of a weak spot, so continuing to agitate on that point will continue to frustrate the owners.

These parcels have the potential to generate both years of joy at no cost for the general public and also revenues for the city when organizations reserve space for events. By contrast, a ‘revenue neutral’ stadium would cost money to attend and would send all event monies to the PawSox owners. Just last night, it was announced that Larry Lucchino, principal owner of the PawSox, is leaving his post at Fenway to devote more time to championing the stadium’s construction. This makes clear to me that, while they are probably getting desperate, this is not the end of anything, we have merely entered the eye of the hurricane.

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Cranston TicketGate was just the tip of an iceberg


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2The ‘-gate’ suffix has become something of a cliche and many of these scandals often fail to compare to the downfall of Richard Nixon. But a new report, issued by the Rhode Island State Police on Monday, certainly paints an image not unlike the Woodward and Bernstein template.

What began in January 2014 with the issuing of a flurry of illicit parking tickets, TicketGate, seen as payback to city councilors for rejecting a police union contract, has snowballed into an exposé of a Department “in turmoil and hampered by a lack of leadership.” Officers were pitted against each other for favor with the chief and mayor from their first day on the job. Employees secretly recorded their conversations with each other so to protect their futures. Private investigators were hired to monitor officers, something going against both past practices and procedure. An unmarked car detail to monitor the activities of a civilian computer technician was directed to leave the jurisdiction of the city of Cranston and which was marked down on overtime sheets as part of another ongoing investigation. And at the center of the report’s diagnosis is Mayor Allan Fung, who came to the office promising fiscal conservatism but is now facing over $5,000,000 in liability from lawsuits brought by officers, fees for the investigations both legitimate and illicit, and expenses to pay the pensions of officers who were put on disability for reasons having more to do with realpolitik than actual ailments.

“The Department is run like the Mafia.”

The Cranston Police Department had for some time now operated with a schism in it. Officers were in either ‘Team A’ or ‘Team B’, pitted against each other for favor and promotions based solely on whether they were on the correct side of this imaginary line. When a rookie officer was brought in, they were automatically designated to a team and therefore their allegiances set in stone based on who they were partnered with as they were broken in for duty. The two groups competed against and actively sabotaged each other, with regulations and rules strictly enforced with harsh punishment for some while others, including the leadership of the force, ignored the same statutes.

As early as his 2008 election, Allan Fung was allegedly actively participating in the scheme, making promises to oust a sitting Chief and shuttle through a union contract in exchange for votes. The report includes the following:

Many Department members described how the shift in leadership was orchestrated by some within the Department, saying there was an agreement between IBPO, Local 301 President [Captain Stephen J.] Antonucci and then-Captain [Marco] Palombo [Jr.]. In exchange for support with the measure to reach a “no confidence vote” against Colonel [Stephen] McGrath, the union would support Captain Palombo as the next Chief of Police. The Executive Board of the IBPO, Local 301, led by President Antonucci, shared a good relationship with Mayor Fung and supported his 2008 mayoral campaign. There were widespread allegations within the rank and file of the Department that the IBPO, Local 301, offered its support to Mayor Fung’s campaign in exchange for the removal of Colonel McGrath as Chief and the settlement of the ongoing labor contract. It is of note that Colonel McGrath did retire, and the labor contract was ratified after Mayor Fung’s election.

Fung has denied any sort of bargain existed prior to his election. It was Antonucci who directed the revenge ticketing in January 2014.

Marco Palombo, former Cranston Police Chief.
Marco Palombo, former Cranston Police Chief.

After Palombo became chief, it appears that he ran the Department as his own personal fiefdom, refusing to answer to anyone but Mayor Fung. This included hiring and promotion decisions, disciplinary actions, and even verifying that injured officers were not faking their inability to work. Section 2.6 of the report included a selection of quotes that are worth repeating:

-“The Colonel needs to be replaced with someone from the outside, because anyone from within will have the same problems of the ‘good old boy’ network.”
-“The Colonel is a bully who has completely abused his power on some members.”

Mayor Fung was made aware of these issues multiple times and continued to retain the services of Palombo despite a growing and visible trend of demoralization and lack of confidence. With the appointment of Michael J. Winquist, an outsider, as Chief of Police, problematic culture has abated, but the legacy of Palombo remains, including officers with careers cut short or hindered significantly by his actions.

“I feel safer on the street than when I am inside the Cranston Police Headquarters building.”

The stories of Captain Todd Patalano and Officer Matthew Josefson illustrate the level of paranoia within the ranks. Both men actively recorded conversations with superiors frequently out of interests in self-preservation, as did other officers. Both men were targeted for harassment and disciplinary action for minute offenses.

In Patalano’s case, he was placed on paid leave for 22 months on charges that the State Police ruled were groundless, who also said the suspension “displayed a lack of fiscal responsibility.” In another instance, after being injured on duty while moving some office materials, Palombo went as far as hiring a private investigator to monitor an officer who “ranks among the very best police officers I have worked with…  Rhode Islanders, and especially the citizens of Cranston and the dedicated men and women of the Cranston Police Department, should be justly proud to be served by Captain Patalano”, according Fung’s own lawyer, Attorney Vincent Ragosta. When Palombo was summoned by Superior Court to testify regarding the Patalano issue, the Constable serving the summons was told on five different occasions that the Chief was unavailable. After Palombo brought a third complaint against Patalano, Michael J. Winquist, the current Chief in Cranston who was then a Captain with the State Police, wrote the following:

The timing of the Cranston Police Department bringing this complaint to our agency is questionable. It appears that the ultimate goal is to terminate Captain Patalano’s employment with the Cranston Police Department.

Patalano’s lawyer, Attorney Joseph F. Penza, Jr., himself said he felt a certain level of intimidation. The report includes this description:

[H]e felt fearful that something might be done to him in an attempt to discredit him and impact the Patalano case. Attorney Penza stated that he began to double-check his car doors to ensure that they were locked when his car was unattended, fearing that someone might plant contraband within his car. Attorney Penza advised in all the years that he has been practicing law and dealing with numerous cases involving dangerous people, this was the first time he had this sick feeling. Attorney Penza advised that the allegations against Captain Patalano were so outrageous and the lengths they would go to in an effort to prosecute him, gave him the sense that anything was possible.

Section 8 of the report, DEMOTION OF SERGEANT MATTHEW JOSEFSON, is a story begging for the adjective ‘Kafka-esque’. After an arrest package was found to have been placed in a recycling bin in the Station, Josefson prepared a memorandum for the Office of Professional Standards that said “This is not the first time that something I did for work has been sabotaged”. When his complaint was heard by OPS, they turned the proceedings into an inquisition and, instead of pursuing the story of “a series of events that illustrated his allegations that he was being set up to fail”, he was charged with lying on his original memorandum because the arrest package was missing one page. The footnotes to this section drive the point home:

The paperwork, with the exception of one…document, required to arraign the defendant before the Justice of the Peace could have been reproduced/reprinted by anyone within the Cranston Police Department currently on duty as it was saved within the Department’s Record Management System (RMS)… The required complaint form could have easily been produced by an on-duty officer as all required information to produce this form was contained within the RMS database.

From there, things went from bad to worse. Upon discovering that Josefson was recording conversations, permissible under Rhode Island laws, the Department tried to have him charged with felony wire-tapping. They went his house and demanded all copies of his recordings, which they claimed were produced despite Department policy, then put him in a do-or-die stranglehold where he needed to either be demoted to Patrolman or face termination under the auspices of a rushed ‘last chance’ agreement. While on suspension, again Palombo hired a private investigator to monitor Josefson. The report includes this following passage:

We learned when an existing policy is revised, a new Microsoft Word document is created and the revisions are highlighted in yellow for easy identification of the modifications… The document is then forwarded to all Department members via the IMC email system to ensure complete dissemination of the revised policy. Simply opening the email is considered confirmation that the policy has been read and understood by a Department member… [N]o new revised rules and regulations containing the recording prohibition language had been disseminated to members through the IMC email system. In addition and as noted previously, numerous members of the Department advised that they were unaware of the recording prohibition contained within the rules and regulations until Sergeant Josefson was disciplined.

Or consider the story of Captain Karen Guilbeault, an account that describes blatant systemic sexism reaching into City Hall. Guilbeault repeatedly filed gender discrimination complaints to no avail and her case describes a promotion process rife with undue interference. Former Director of Personnel Susan Bello said the following in her testimony:

[I]n 2012, things kind of came to a head because as officers were coming in to review scores and that kind of thing…they started coming forth about things: that there…was improper targeting; that people were getting improper discipline. And I was most familiar with some…irregularities with Karen…Guilbeault. Because she had come to me and said that there were some things that were improper…[T]hey…didn’t make formal complaints with me, but what was complained to me repeatedly was that once Palombo came into office, that they could not go to the union because the union was picking and choosing whose grievance they wanted to go forward based on whether they were liked by the union or by Palombo. So when people were starting to come to me and say we can’t do anything, because, you know, my response would be go to the union and file a grievance, and I was told repeatedly that…the union, because they were in bed with Palombo, wouldn’t do anything about it. So these things started to filter through to me. But what…I was privy to directly was during the exam process in 2012,…there was an attempt to get the scores. And I am missing one email, but I do believe that I was contacted sometime in the beginning of October, and I believe it was by Major Ryan, in that they wanted the scores. The…pressure was clearly regarding the captains’ scores primarily, then the lieutenants’. There wasn’t that much interest in the sergeants’ scores. But I was contacted by them demanding to see the scores of the written exam for captain, and at that point, I said no,…you’d never get the scores: the Mayor doesn’t get the scores; the scores are…protected by law…They were claiming: oh, we don’t want anybody’s name and we don’t want anybody’s direct score, we just want the range. But in the case of Karen Guilbeault, since she was the highest scorer, if I for some reason illegally gave them those scores, they would automatically know because they had the other four scores that oh, that was her score.

Guilbeault had tried to attain a higher rank repeatedly and was denied while other officers were given promotions that violated the City Charter. The level of institutionalized discrimination has delayed her advancement despite serving seventeen years on the force.

Captain Thomas Dodd was another officer of high standing who seems to have simply gotten in the way of Fung. On July 22, 2013, Fung was instrumental in getting Dodd put on a disability pension despite the fact that doctors felt the officer did not qualify. Cranston City Councilman Richard Santamaria later said of his vote to grant Dodd the pension “I wish I could have that one back.” Dodd went on to file a complaint and requested an injunction from Superior Court to prevent him from being forced into retirement. Two days after Dodd was retired, Stephen Antonucci, the police union president and later head of the illicit ticketing, was promoted to fill the vacancy.

“So I no longer have to feel my safety is in jeopardy?”

In February 2013, Palombo was a man on a mission. The City and Police Department had a computer network that was part of a larger City of Cranston schematic. Both due to a convoluted process in obtaining files and Palombo’s own security concerns, the Chief ordered the implementation of a process of separating the two systems. On February 14, Palombo insisted on that day he required a set of passcodes from a computer technician contracted by the City. The technician’s name, company, and residence have been redacted from the report, but the individual in question was the Vice President of the company at the time. When Palombo was told the tech could not provide him the requested passcodes, the Chief flew into a rage. One witness said this in the report:

[I]t’s mid to late morning. At this point, the Colonel didn’t want to hear it anymore and basically, again, it appeared to be like a psychotic episode where he flipped out, and he was screaming at this guy to surrender the credentials, and the guy was trying to tell him I….I can’t, I got to get back to the technicians and stop…

After getting off the phone call, Palombo sent a squad car out of their jurisdiction to the technician’s home in another city. After spending a few hours monitoring the man’s home, the tech was able to get the codes delivered to the Chief Records Clerk. The tech called Mayor Fung, who convened an 8:30 am meeting that Palombo failed to appear at. Fung then sent him an e-mail message that reads:

I am extremely disappointed to hear that you failed to show up at the 8:30 AM meeting that Director Cordy had requested by text last night to you regarding the IT situation at the police Department…Thus, please be available this afternoon at 2PM so that we can discuss this entire situation and how we need to move forward.

On February 24, Cranston City Director of Administration Gerald Cordy received this anonymously mailed letter:

We had another incident occurring involving our chief who yelled at a rep from a computer company who works for our police Department and had some codes the chief wanted. Maj. Ryan said the chief yelled and sweared at the guy and threatened him… What is happening again is more assignments given by the chief to fight and push people around. He’s using us to threaten the computer guy. After the chief made threats to the computer guy he sent Maj. Ryan to make us follow the guy like a criminal because he argued with him. Most of us refused OT [overtime]. We can’t work on criminal cases cause (sic) OT has been stopped but we can go make OT and follow the guy who lived in…and follow him all night and write down everywhere he goes. The detective was told to fill out an OT slip and put he worked on a robbery case because city hall would find out. The OT slip has a fake reason so you won’t know the chief has a detective follow a guy for this reason. The chief said he don’t (sic) answer to Cordy only the mayor. Making us do things we can’t do is illegal and we got no jurisdiction in… The whole place has no trust or moral [sic] left here. We think is it almost criminal to make a detective lie or he won’t get paid to hide it from you. They didn’t want the OT reason to say the surveillance on the computer guy.

No investigation or disciplinary proceedings were ever taken up by the Department in response to this incident. On March 17, 2014, Palombo announced his retirement.

“This is political.”

With the appointment of Chief Winquist, the infighting and ‘Team A’-‘Team B’ rivalry did seem to die down. But even after his appointment, apparently Fung was set on preserving some of the old culture. On November 10, 2014, Fung and Winquist had a meeting where he insisted that the Chief support his decision to re-instate Captain Antonucci, the leader of the illicit ticketing at the beginning of that year. Winquist refused, stating that he felt the impending review of the officer’s termination should run its course while the Mayor’s interference in Department affairs would seriously affect Winquist’s standing in his new position. Fung said the situation “dragged on long enough and it was time for Stephen to join the team to help move the Department forward.” On another occasion, his Chief of Staff Carlos Lopez said “Stephen was a good guy, who did a lot of good things for the Cranston Police Department.” Winquist at one point seriously contemplated tendering his resignation, a move that would have raised eyebrows both within the Rhode Island police confraternity and the general public. Over a series of meetings, including one on a scheduled vacation day, Fung continued to refuse to recuse himself of the situation and saw things in terms of palace intrigue instead of administration. Winquist furthermore insisted that returning Antonucci to duty would kill morale in the Department that was only beginning to be repaired, but Fung remained belligerent. The report includes Winquist’s personal statement of events since becoming Chief, which ends with the following:

I continue to believe the best course is for the case to be adjudicated through the LEOBOR [police union adjudication process] hearing committee and allow the LEOBOR committee to either sustain the recommendation of termination, instill a punishment they determined fair and appropriate or dismiss the case if it is determined to have no merit. Attorney Ragosta advised me as well as Mayor Fung that the investigation was strong and the evidence supported the pending charges.

This past June, NBC 10 revealed that Antonucci had reached a settlement and retire in April 2016. On August 3, the Cranston City Council called for a special session to question Fung on the report.

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The Harlem Strut jazzes up Providence


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Beehive-Jazz-ClubJazz is the music that my soul turns to as a default. I went through a classic rock phase, did the whole punk/ska thing, I even enjoy some classical/orchestral on the side, but my heart explodes whenever I listen to some old time jazz. When I hear the opening notes of John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme or journey through the labyrinth of Dave Brubeck’s Time Out!, something inside me bursts like a firecracker in the night.

On August 8 at 2 PM, local youth ages 12-18 will be holding a free jazz concert, “The Harlem Strut, at the Providence Public Library Main Branch at 150 Empire Street. Under the musical direction of  Lynne Jackson and Michael Palter and the artistic direction of Robb Dimmick, these twelve musicians come from a variety of backgrounds and include students Trinity Academy for the Performing Arts (TAPA), having spent six hours a day rehearsing in anticipation of the event.

For more information, interested parties can contact Ray Rickman at Rickman@RickmanGroup.com or 401-421-0606.

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How to bring the unions to the stadium opposition


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buildrilogo
Build RI is a labor-management partnership between a variety of trade unions.

My colleague Steve Ahlquist previously posted a great story covering the two meetings on July 27 about the proposed construction of the taxpayer-subsidized stadium. One point that was made at the Providence meeting, worth expanding on here, is the issue of the construction trade unions, which have endorsed this project. This piece will make an effort to appeal to both the general membership and leadership of these unions, who will prove to be some of the most important allies in this struggle and, on the other hand, will perhaps be the make-or-break of this deal.

It is important to empathize with the membership, they are facing a massive drop in employment and job sites, with a huge percentage of the rank-and-file out of work. This project would create jobs for a large swathe of their members, something I do not begrudge them for.

But this is a decision I do not think they have properly contemplated. First, while the governor has previously eluded to a hiring push that would target minority workers, the current contractor participating in this project, Gilbane, has one of the worst records of minority hiring in the nation. That is an important issue to discuss because the disenfranchisement of minority workers is a vital one.

Second, and perhaps more importantly, this stadium could generate short-term gains on one project but may in fact kill development in the I-195 land in the near future. As Kate Bramson reported on May 2, any and all further construction hinges on a super-permit that would install a stormwater mitigation mechanism at the proposed open park.  Bramson wrote in that piece:

The master permit hinges on a plan to use parkland within the 195 district for stormwater mitigation. Builders are required to treat a percentage of stormwater on parcels they develop. However, if they can’t meet the entire stormwater requirement on a parcel, the master permit allows them to gain credit from the parkland’s treatment of stormwater.

Given the tides and ebbs of Rhode Island politics, this could end up killing future development on the I-195 corridor for up to five years. And on top of that, recall that the federal government also will need to be involved, prolonging the wait. That of course translates out to a much greater amount of time for unemployed union members to remain so. Between an extended waiting period and a traffic-clogging stadium, potential developers in the bio-med and education sectors might take their business elsewhere, keeping that land vacant for a very long time.

Bucking the trend and opposing an endorsement that has already been made by the union is always a tremendously problematic issue, no doubt. It takes courage, gumption, and being versed in the relevant documentary records so to make a cogent case. I would refer interested parties especially to this slideshow produced already by the I-195 Commission, an outline of proposed development by landscape architects that every taxpayer in the state already funded. Just to re-iterate, the state has already paid three times for this land.  First, we paid for the de-comissioning and demolition of the old I-195 highway. Second, we paid to have it zoned and developed by the federal government. Third, we paid for the aforementioned landscape architects and other planners to work out the schematics of the park.

If this ballpark scheme goes through, it will cost taxpayers another three times. First they will need to pay for the stadium’s construction. Second they will pay to re-design the sewer and highway system to accommodate the stadium. Third we need to re-develop another parcel of land as a park should the government refuse to accept the idea of a smaller park on the grounds of the stadium.

There is simply too much risk as opposed to reward in this idea and organized labor should rethink their position, not so to undermine their standing but to promote and improve their reputation. This week Boston Mayor Martin Walsh rejected the move to finance the 2024 Olympics with Beantown tax monies, causing their bid for the Games to be voided. That move has probably bought Walsh another term in office and could very well give him a future bid for higher office. The unions in Rhode Island would be wise to take such logic into consideration. To be clear, I am no opponent of labor unions, I am a member of one and was an eyewitness to the Illinois Caterpillar strike in the 1990’s. But this project, should it come to pass due to labor’s support, will be seen by many as a black mark on its record and will be fantastic fare for union busters on both sides of the aisle.

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Tuesday to Tuesday: RI Future’s arts and entertainment calendar

grafitti-1RIFuture is a fine institution that has made important contributions to the Rhode Island news culture as the ProJo has shrunk in both scope and talent while the news channels have become more corporatized. It is our hope that this new feature – the ‘Tuesday to Tuesday Arts and Entertainment Calendar’ will bring a lighter side to the fare. As we move into the dog days of summer, I’m open to tips and press releases regarding the events you or someone you know may be holding in the next few weeks. Feel free to e-mail data to me at andrew.james.stewart.rhode.island@gmail.com.

MY PICKS
Here is my selection of events that you should definitely consider checking out this week.

  • 7/28
    Get Out! Cardboard Rockets at Providence Children’s Museum, 1-3 pm, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person
    Something fun to do with the kids and probably a minor refresher on the basic physics of aviation.
  • 7/29
    Vinyasa Yoga with Julie Shore at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, Noon-1 pm, $5
    Why not try out something new and help a working-class instructor at the same time. I do not subscribe to the theology underlying yoga itself, but the exercises and poses are helping me overcome some back issues and are worth checking out.
  • 7/30
    CAPOTE at Warwick Public Library, 7 pm, Free -or- Movies on the Block: BLADE RUNNER at Grants Block, 7:30 pm, Free
    This one is a tough call, so I will advise both, it depends on where you located in the state. CAPOTE is a fantastic retelling of how the true crime novel In Cold Blood was composed by the titular author, whereas BLADE RUNNER remains one of the greatest visions of the future in the past three decades, a film I rank with STAR WARS as the best science fiction pictures in American history.
  • 7/31
    RI Peoples Assembly: Emancipation Day Festival at Temple of Music Roger Williams Park, 12:25, Free -and- Food Truck Fridays at Carousel Village in Roger Williams Park, 5 pm, Free admission
    Take a trip over to Roger Williams Park and help some local businessmen by sampling their great food along with celebrating the end of American slavery. The two are located essentially next to each other, so it is an easy task.
  • 8/1
    August Gallery Reception at AS220 Galleries, 5 pm, Free
    AS220 continues to be one of the great centers of art in the Providence area and this is a great opportunity to take in some of their new works.
  • 8/2
    THE EMPIRE REVUE PRESENTS “THE OCEAN SHOW” at AS220 Main Stage, 8 pm, $10
    A comedy-music spectacular about the ocean blue, including a selection of seafaring tunes. What’s to dislike?
  • 8/3
    “THE SOCIAL AVENGER” A reading written and directed by LENNY SCHWARTZ at Arctic Playhouse, 8 pm, $10
    Lenny Schwartz is a prolific and versatile writer who has put his talent to work in a variety of genres and this should be a great night.
  • 8/4
    Rhode Island International Festival Opening Night at PPAC, 7 pm, $15/$50 for Gala Event also
    The weeklong RIIFF is a mainstay of RI film culture and opening night is usually a great event to attend.  Tickets can be purchased here.

7/28
Get Out! Cardboard Rockets at Providence Children’s Museum, 1-3 pm, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 12-1 pm, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Native Giant, Neutrinos, Eric and the Nothing, Pyramid at Psychic Readings, 9 pm-1 am, $6

Armageddon Shop Presents: Windhand, Pilgram, and Second Grave at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm-1 am, $10

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

7/29
Blithewold’s Summer Concert Series: Music at Sunset at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 5 pm, Member $7, Non-Member $10

Wheels at Work: Ambulance at Providence Children’s Museum, 10 am, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

Vinyasa Yoga with Julie Shore at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, Noon-1 pm, $5

Open Level Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30-8 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Empty Vessels – La Luna – Terror Eyes – Take Nothing, Leave Everything at AS220 Main Stage, 9pm, $7

7/30
CAPOTE at Warwick Public Library, 7 pm, Free

Summer Concert Series presented by ALEX AND ANI at Carolyn’s Sakonnet Vineyard, 6 pm, $10

newportFILM Outdoors! WHAT HAPPENED, MISS SIMONE? at Doris Duke’s Rough Point, 8:30 pm (sunset), Free (Sugg. donation $5)

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

Yoga in the Garden at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 11 am, $10 member, $15 non-member Pre-paid 1-month unlimited pass

Introduction to Mat Cutting at AS220 Media Arts, 6 pm, $65

Evening Yoga at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:15 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Manton Avenue Project Presents “Go Team!: The Sports Plays” at AS220’s Blackbox, 7 pm, Pay what you can

Holiday Music, No Hands, Worst Gift, 14 Foot 1 at Psychic Readings, 9:30 pm, $6

Movies on the Block: BLADE RUNNER at Grants Block, 7:30 pm, Free

7/31
Family Fun Friday: Rolie Polie Guacamole at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 11 am, Included with admission

Food Truck Fridays at Carousel Village in Roger Williams Park, 5 pm, Free admission

Manton Avenue Project Presents “Go Team!: The Sports Plays” at AS220’s Blackbox, 7 pm, Pay what you can

Sun Bears, Prism, Skunk Jesus, and Hungry Freaks at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

8/1
Stars and Night Sky at Providence Children’s Museum, 10 am, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person

ALEX AND ANI Sunday Jazz Series at Carolyn’s Sakonnet Vinyard, 1 pm, $10 per car

Manton Avenue Project Presents “Go Team!: The Sports Plays” at AS220’s Blackbox, 2 pm, Pay what you can

Traditional Irish Music Session at AS220 Bar & FOO(D), 4 pm, Free

August Gallery Reception at AS220 Galleries, 5 pm, Free
AS220 Main Gallery at 115 Empire St.: Sonny With a Chance of Clouds: New Photographs by James “Sonny” Walker & BITTER/SWEET: New Photographs by Brittany Marcoux
OPEN WINDOW: Girl Talk: New Paintings by Sarah Samways
CABINET OF CURIOSITIES: Embroidered Stories: New Work by Chloe Cooper
AS220 Project Space at 93 Mathewson St.: Bird’s Eye View: New Work by Mara Metcalf
AS220 Reading Room: FAB ACADEMY Year End Review
Resident’s Gallery @131 Washington St.: Upcycled Life: new work by Steve Duque

Top 5 Fiend Presents: Morris & The East Coast, The Quins, Wild Sun at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

Improv Jones at AS220 Black Box, 10 pm, $5

RI Peoples Assembly: Emancipation Day Festival at Temple of Music Roger Williams Park, 12:25, Free

8/2
Core Workout with Daniel Shea at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 9 am, $5

Beginner Ballet at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 10:30, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Intermediate Ballet w/ Stephanie Albanese at 95 Empire Dance Studio, Noon, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

THE EMPIRE REVUE PRESENTS “THE OCEAN SHOW” at AS220 Main Stage, 8 pm, $10

I Eat Rocks / Mis(s)invader / Sauna Heat / Vanilla Function at Aurora, 9 pm, $5 (18+)

8/3
Intermediate/Advanced Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

TOP 5 FIEND PRESENTS: Warbler Roost, Accidental Seabirds, Community Center, John Faraone at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, $7

“THE SOCIAL AVENGER” A reading written and directed by LENNY SCHWARTZ at Arctic Playhouse, 8 pm, $10

8/4
Rhode Island International Festival Opening Night at PPAC, 7 pm, $15/$50 for Gala Event also

Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 12-1 pm, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

OPEN Sewing Circle * a night of making things * at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, Free

wichita, small talk, he heard footsteps at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

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‘Birth Of A Grammar With Noam Chomsky’ and summer blockbuster culture


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YOUTUBE PICWe are now through July and, to that extent, the almost done with entire summer movie season.  With releases like ‘Mad Max’ and ‘Jurassic World,’ we have seen a plethora of by-the-numbers blockbusters that all seem strangely familiar.  This is not an accident; rather, there is a basic grammar and vocabulary that defines the programming of any and all action films.  As early as the works of Abel Gance, it was understood that editorial tricks could be used to manipulate viewers and generate reactions on a psychological level.  This was later codified by the Soviet film makers Lev Kuleshov and Sergei Eisenstein, whose work remains extremely tenable despite the collapse of the USSR.  Kuleshov’s experiments demonstrated the way audiences react and insinuate their own interpretations into viewing materials when they have no real reason to do so, whereas Eisenstein formulated his theory of the montage using the Hegelian-Marxist dialectic to describe film in the context of historical materialism.

The first true American blockbuster was without any doubt the DW Griffith film ‘Birth of a Nation.’  Released in May 1915, it was the first multi-reel epic film that broke every previous convention, going beyond the usual length and breadth of the 15-minute short films and tackling one of the greatest blood baths in American history, the Civil War.  But Griffith also created a picture that would do great harm to our society for decades.  The second half of the picture retells the story of Reconstruction as a debacle, featuring black men as imbeciles, mixed-ethnicity ‘mulattoes’ as sexual beasts, and the Ku Klux Klan as heroic defenders of Southern female virtue.  As a result of the film’s release, the Klan saw its ranks explode and the civil rights movement’s gains were set back decades.

Several months ago, I had the opportunity to sit down with MIT linguist Dr. Noam Chomsky.  Based off the work of Warren Buckland, Michel Colin, and others, there is now a veritable sub-branch of cinema studies that has taken prior work dealing with the semiotics of cinema and re-written the genre using the Chomskyan theories of transformative generative grammar.  The resulting conversation is quite instructive to our own dialogue about race and racism in America as well as our thought process regarding what we would now call the summer blockbuster.

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What’s the deal with the Iran deal?


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Flag_of_Iran.svgThis week there has been a flood of commentary about the Iran deal. The liberal side of the aisle sees this as a major achievement for the Obama administration, a feat that will stand alongside his rapprochement with Cuba as part of his lasting legacy. On the conservative side of the aisle, this is the apocalypse itself and Obama has doomed us all to a nuclear armageddon.

However, anyone with a grip on even a small shred of reality, regardless of political standing, should be able to see that both sides are lying through their teeth and this whole production has been one long charade that has caused unnecessary suffering for only one group of people, the general population of Iran. When the US instigated a series of sanctions against Iran, the supreme leader and president never were forced into austerity, they remained quite well-off and could rely on a host of luxuries provided by a variety of sources. Instead, it was the everyday people of Iran who suffered. I happened to be acquainted some time ago with an Iranian emigre whose father died due to taking a batch of medication that was of inferior grade, something that could have been avoided had the sanctions regimen not been in place. What did his government do so that his father deserved to die?

The reality is not ultimately simple, but the truth is much more easy to digest than the lunacy being fed to us by both CNN and Fox News. However, to understand this, we need to hold a thorough discussion of the international context in which this occurs and include in it a critical view of our connection to Israel. As a forewarning, those who believe that Israel and the Jews in general are running the show will find no comfort here, I do not see a grand conspiracy where the Jewish State controls American policy. In fact, I see it as the exact opposite, Israel and its leadership act solely on the allowance of the United States and have always only gone as far as Washington will allow them. After the devastation in Gaza last summer, Benjamin Netanyahu’s stunt speaking to Congress last spring behind Obama’s back, and the election of a deeply reactionary government in Israel shortly thereafter, the Israelis may be finding themselves more and more recieving support only in the neoconservative halls of power in the District of Columbia, but the puppet master of all things speaks with an American accent, not a Hebrew one.

  1. What is to be gained from Iran?
    Prior to the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the Iranian Shah was one of America and Israel’s closest allies in the region, something that dated back to 1953 coup, instigated by the British Petroleum oil firm and coordinated by the Central Intelligence Agency. As our ally, Iran was a major source of petroleum products and helped alleviate the strain on the American economy caused by the Arab oil embargo of 1973. By reopening our oil trade with Iran, it would drastically affect oil markets worldwide. Furthermore, unlike Saudi Arabia, with its cruel and totalitarian Wahhabi theocracy, Iran is a metropolitan society, with high degree of education and cultural diversity that will enrich the exchange of ideas and thinkers. There have also been analysts who have noted that the influx of Iranian energy products will undermine Russia, which currently is a major player in the European market, something that plays into the wider geopolitical designs of the what could be called the ‘Brzezinski plan’ that Obama and the Democratic Party subscribe to. Whereas the neoconservatives and Republicans are intent on creating a sort of ‘boots on the ground’ empire in the Middle East to allegedly ‘foster democracy’ (read: create a Levantine Monroe doctrine), the Democrats have been following a much more intricate plan for about four decades now. Zbigniew Brzezinski, the National Security advisor under Jimmy Carter, is a Polish-born political scientist whose major goal was first freeing his homeland from Communism and then undermining Russia’s ability to assert itself as a global power. The recent events in Ukraine and other moves against Russia in the past few years can be understood in this context as elements of the Brzezinski plan.
  2. Does Iran hate Jews?
    In a word, no. It is fundamentally heretical to the Shia school of Islam that the Iranians follow because Jews and Christians are protected by the Koran as ‘People of the Book’. Dr. Siamak Morsadegh, an Iranian and a Jew, is a democratically-elected member of the Majlis, the Iranian parliament, and a practicing physician. Iran has a small minority of Jews that are allowed to practice their religion freely in a community dating back to the time of Cyrus the Great.

    2005_1223_iran_faith_600
    Iranian Jew praying in Shiraz.

    However, Iran does have a stated opposition to Zionism and the actions of the State of Israel. In order to properly discuss this, we need to unpack the term Zionism and distinguish it from Judaism as a religion.
    Zionism was formalized as a secular political ideology in 1897 by the Austro-Hungarian journalist Theodor Herzl as a reaction to the anti-Semitic Dreyfus Affair in France. Over the next two decades, various ideas and proposals were floated for the location of a Jewish homeland, including Uganda and Argentina. However, at the end of the First World War, the Zionist movement engaged first France and then Great Britain in a series of discussions that ultimately led to them serving as a proxy colonial army for the Europeans in historic Palestine, a major port on the Mediterranean of the then-crumbling Ottoman Empire. After the formalization of the Balfour Declaration, the Zionist movement engaged in a 30-year effort that included the organs of a modern state and the dispossession of the native indigenous people, the Palestinian Arabs, from the land. It should be noted here that the pre-Zionist Jewish community of Palestine, the Old Yishuv, viewed Zionism as a heretical trend and opposed it on religious and ethical grounds. With the coming of the Second World War and the Nazi persecution of European Jewry, the Zionist movement saw their opportunity to take advantage of the situation and make a final claim for statehood. In 1948, the United Nations granted the Zionists a partition of over 50% of the total landmass of historic Palestine. In the wake of the declaration of the State of Israel, the various Zionist militia movements engaged in a brutal series of ethnic cleansings of the Palestinians, which included rape, murder, and theft of both property and land, a tragedy the Palestinians today call the Nakba. Since 1948, the Israeli government has engaged in a continued regime of repression that has included multiple wars and occupations of lands. Since 1967, despite the protestations of the Old Yishuv and outside resistance by groups like the Orthodox Jewish Neturei Karta sect, Israel has effectively turned what was once a secular atheist movement into a religious one through what is called the settler movement. After illegally dispossessing Arabs of their lands, the IDF will then build small cities, illegal under international law, and install as residents messianic Israelis who believe they will hasten the coming of the Messiah by creating a wider Jewish nation-state. This is in direct violation of Israeli and international laws.
    That Iran would oppose such a state of affairs is not by definition anti-Semitic. Anti-Semitism has classically been defined as an irrational hatred or fear of Jews, traditionally related to either Christian blood libel prejudices or conspiracy theories about the role of Jews in international finance or governance. What the Iranians oppose is a series of socio-political moves made by the Israeli government that brutalizes the livelihood of Muslim and Christian Palestinians. Consider this statement by Ayatollah Khomeini himself:

  3. Does Iran want to destroy Israel?
    The Iranians, despite their rhetoric for the masses, have a very clear record at the UN, the body that created Israel, one that indicates they recognize Israel. Every year, there is a vote taken for a motion on the resolution of the Palestine Question. And every year, Iran votes along with the rest of the world for the following resolution: Israel shall continue to exist at peace with its neighbors within its pre-June 1967 borders. Of course, Israel and America consistently reject this, thus extending the conflict, but Iran is tacitly recognizing Israel as a state every time it casts these votes. And regardless of the political propaganda, the UN is where things actually count in terms of international law.
  4. Does Iran support terrorism?
    This is a loaded question because terrorism as a concept itself is loaded. The actions of the raiders at the Boston Tea Party can be termed as terrorist. In the First Red Scare, labor union agitators were called terrorists. There is a saying that one man’s terrorist is another’s freedom fighter. Instead of being superficial, we need to discriminate between those who commit what we could call external violence and those who commit internal violence. I would use as an example of external perpetrators al-Queda or ISIL, groups that cross national boundaries and commit acts that are targeted towards civilians that serve narcissistic and reactionary ends.
    However, Iran is pigeonholed for giving support and training to Hizbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. What makes these two groups different is they generally are involved in acts of violence within their own territory or proportional response to military attacks by a foreign power. In fact, the European Union, New Zealand and the United Kingdom list the armed wing of Hizbollah as terrorists but do not list the civic governance branch as such. One of the more notable instances of violence Hizbollah has perpetrated was the bombing of a Marines barracks in 1983. That was an act perpetrated inside Lebanon by Hizbollah, who are native to the country. And to complicate matters further, at the time Lebanon was ruled by the fascist Gemayel family that had previously collaborated with Gen. Ariel Sharon in the murder of innocent Palestinians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. I do not revel in the murder of Marines and should note here that my father, as a Navy officer, was nearly deployed as a response to the bombing. But the United States was propping up a reactionary quisling regime that had participated in genocidal acts. Under international law, people under repression have the right to take up arms and attack military targets that give aid to their oppressors. That’s not my personal preference and certainly not something I love, but the truth is often a bitter pill to swallow. When the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese blew up military outposts during the Tet Offensive and killed Americans who were aiding the likewise puppet government we had installed in South Vietnam, millions of people on both sides of the Iron Curtain, including here in America, were not calling it terrorism, they hoped that finally the American government would wake up to reality and accept that the Vietnamese people were in totality opposed to our designs for Indochina.
    In the case of Hamas, the situation is again the same. As a side-note of some importance, it needs to be understood that the Western media has for a long time now labelled a whole slew of groups with wildly different programs and agendas as ‘Hamas’. When I refer to Hamas, I am referring to the government elected democratically by the people of Gaza in 2006, an organization that is not regarded as terrorists by Russia, Norway, Switzerland, Brazil, Turkey, China, and Qatar. What’s more, if we are honest, the fault for the fostering of Hamas is not with Iran, it is with Israel and America! The revelations by WikiLeaks have made extremely clear that the United States and Mossad funneled monies and resources to Hamas beginning in the 1980’s intentionally so to undermine the secular Palestine Liberation Organization and Yasser Arafat. The reason for this is simple, the greatest threat to American hegemony in the region has always been a secular Arab nationalism in a vein not unlike the ideology of Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress. As such, the policy has always been to exploit religious divides and hope they will foster division. In fact, the opposite has come to pass. Hamas was elected in 2006 by both Christians and Muslims in Gaza because the people had become so disgusted with the corruption, servility, and ineptitude of Yasser Arafat’s Fatah Party, which had become so unbearably compromised by the mid-1990’s and the Oslo accords that the late secular scholar Edward Said could not bear to attend the historic signing on the White House lawn between Yitzak Rabin and Arafat, overseen by the gloating Bill Clinton. Since that time, Gaza has been under a blockade of such depravity that the restrictions imposed on Cuba look like a vacation. Again, Hamas has not broken international laws, they have engaged in offensive violence against military opponents in the field of combat. During last year’s Operation Protective Edge, while the IDF was dropping munitions on anything and everything that moved, the Hamas fighters were only engaging with IDF soldiers. And as for the so-called ‘rockets’ that Hamas is raining down on Israelis, an unidentified Israeli official told Dan Williams of Reuters that they are ‘pipes, basically’. These projectiles are in fact home-made implements shot up in the air from inside what British Prime Minister David Cameron called ‘a prison camp’ that are meant as alarms calling for help, the people are saying ‘we are dying, please, save us’. So again, the comparison can be accurately made with the Vietnamese. We are again dealing with a national liberation movement that is intent on relieving itself of occupation and brutalization by a force which has broken international and its own laws to enact a reign of terror.
    There is only one thing different here between the Vietnamese and their Soviet sponsors and Hizbollah, Hamas, and their Iranian sponsors, one thing that cuts to the core of the issue: the Vietnamese were atheist Communists while the Lebanese and Palestinians are Muslim Islamists. And that is a fact that perhaps leaves the reader with a deeply disturbing and painful realization about themselves.
  5. Do the Iranians desire a regime change?
    There does exist a level of state oppression within Iran, that is inherent in any state. However, the Iranians remember the US-sponsored brutality of the Shah very well, so they have absolutely zero interest in returning to the good graces of the Americans by accepting a hand-picked puppet. For the foreseeable future, Iran will retain the Islamic Revolution and remain loyal to it.
  6. Is Iran building a nuclear weapon?
    No. To begin with, they have devoted multiple years to promulgating a theological verdict that the atomic bomb is un-Islamic. Second, they are not insane, Iran is within reach of the many nuclear bombs that Israel has stockpiled at their atomic outpost at Dimona. If they were even trying to build a bomb, the Israelis would reduce them to smithereens within minutes. Third, both Israeli and American intelligence agencies have made clear in both classified and unclassified reports that there is no threat of a nuclear weapon being built by Tehran. Iran is a signatory of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which does allow for the creation of nuclear power and non-weapons grade atomic materials, such as those used in medical technologies. On the other hand, the traditional protests against nuclear power in general still apply, like a risk for accidents like those at Fukushima or Chernobyl or questions regarding the disposal of nuclear waste, but they are not building the weapon of ultimate destruction.

Of course, the reaction has been nuclear from Netanyahu.

image1Ted Cruz, for example, has tried to add an amendment to any agreement that would require Iran recognize Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state (meaning a polity that explicitly denies rights to non-Jews such as the Christian, Muslim, and atheist Palestinians). And because the Republicans have split the Congress, it could very well come to pass that this deal could get sunk. And if that were to happen, both sides of the Bush/Clinton 2.0 ticket are adamant hawks who would be willing to bomb Iran. Of course, it is also becoming clear that the two candidates who have essentially bought their party’s nominations are failing dismally with primary voters. Jeb Bush is unable to distance himself from the neocons that defined the cabinets of his father and his brother while embracing the Tea Party, whereas Hillary Clinton is falling apart due in no small part to Bernie Sanders, who surprisingly packed an Arizona convention center to the gills last weekend. I remain skeptical of Sanders for a variety of reasons, but unless the status quo is upturned, this very good deal with Iran could be foiled, resulting in further victimization of the Iranian people.

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Ed Achorn must think ProJo readers are stupid


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Duh, I tied my shoes on my own today!
Duh, I tied my shoes on my own today!

It never ceases to amaze me how stupid Edward Achorn thinks Providence Journal readers are.  Never mind the fact that there is a gigantic conflict of interests to have the Vice President also serving as Editor of the Editorial pages, therefore insuring the paper toes the company line.  Let’s leave out the fact he publishes his pro-charter school nonsense while his wife just ironically is employed by the charter school lobby.  And disregard the fact he prints climate change denial epistles, homo/transphobic rants, racist nonsense, and blatantly-obvious talking points for the lunatic-fringe of the Republican Party that stopped being conservative and became delusional years ago all in the name of ‘balance’.  Let’s just focus for one second on how plain stupid he thinks people are.

On July 23, the Providence Journal printed an ode to the First Amendment and how that dastardly Obama is going to destroy free speech via the IRS.  Leaving aside the grammatical issues of having a one-sentence paragraph, Mr. Objectivity treated us to this nugget of honesty:

Judicial Watch, a nonpartisan educational foundation, recently obtained information showing that the IRS wanted to go even further than thwarting the activities of conservative groups: some in the agency appear to have wanted to criminalize them.

However, anyone with movable digits and the brain capacity of a tomato can easily visit the website of said organization and read this:

Judicial Watch, Inc., a conservative, non-partisan educational foundation, promotes transparency, accountability and integrity in government, politics and the law. Through its educational endeavors, Judicial Watch advocates high standards of ethics and morality in our nation’s public life and seeks to ensure that political and judicial officials do not abuse the powers entrusted to them by the American people. Judicial Watch fulfills its educational mission through litigation, investigations, and public outreach. [Emphasis added.]

There’s shooting fish in a barrel and then there is just obvious laziness on top of lying on top of expecting your readers to never use Google.

Let’s examine, for just a moment, the issue of race.  On July 15, the ProJo ran an editorial called EASE AND INTEGRITY that was loaded with dog-whistles and codewords.  The editorial superficially was supposed to take on a recent bill proposed by Rep. Cicilline in the Congress that would automatically register voters at the DMV.  But then comes this Pulitzer-worthy paragraph:

At the same time, any move to change voter registration procedures must be approached first and foremost with a focus on ensuring the integrity of our elections. Are the motor vehicle departments in Rhode Island and other states up to the task of handling far more instances in which people want to register to vote? And if they are, are proper safeguards in place to prevent duplication, fraud or the registration of non-citizens to vote?

Voter fraud was totally debunked years ago.  The Washington Post (not exactly a Leninist rag) launched an investigation and found 31 credible instances of voter fraud out of one billion American ballots cast.  Yes, billion with a B.  Of course, just to drive it home and get rid of any doubt, Edward R. Murrow Jr. added this for spice:

It is in the narrow interest of politicians to covet votes, whether they are legal ones or not. What would be greatly in the nation’s interest is to make sure all legal voters may readily participate, and — something advocated less often, perhaps, by politicians — that they have a solid grounding in civics and history.

It is an established fact that the voter identification laws that have been passed in this country are targeted towards low-income populations that have neither the time nor resources to obtain a driver’s license, and, as irony would have it, a majority of those people are black or brown folks.  Those folks also tend to have been disenfranchised by the education system also and might not have the stellar training in civics and history that Mr. Achorn has.  Heaven forbid that these great unwashed masses of negroes and people from Spanish not have memorized the Federalist Papers like Mr. Pulitzer-nominated Journalist.  Of course, if he were to consult the Federalist Papers, he might be amazed at this ditty in Paper 52 (numbered 51 in the Dawson edition used by Wikipedia, 52 in my Penguin edition):

The definition of the right of suffrage is very justly regarded as a fundamental article of republican Government. It was incumbent on the Convention, therefore, to define and establish this right in the Constitution. To have left it open for the occasional regulation of the Congress, would have been improper for the reason just mentioned. To have submitted it to the Legislative discretion of the States, would have been improper for the same reason; and for the additional reason that it would have rendered too dependent on the State Governments, that branch of the Federal Government which ought to be dependent on the People alone…  As far as we can draw any conclusion from it, it must be that if the People…have been able under all these disadvantages to retain any liberty whatever, the advantage of biennial elections would secure to them every degree of liberty, which might depend on a due connection between their Representatives and themselves.

Or perhaps Number 58/59?

Nothing can be more evident, than that an exclusive power of regulating elections for the National Government, in the hands of the State Legislatures, would leave the existence of the Union entirely at their mercy. They could at any moment annihilate it, by neglecting to provide for the choice of persons to administer its affairs. It is to little purpose to say, that a neglect or omission of this kind would not be likely to take place. The constitutional possibility of the thing, without an equivalent for the risk, is an unanswerable objection. Nor has any satisfactory reason been yet assigned for incurring that risk. The extravagant surmises of a distempered jealousy, can never be dignified with that character. If we are in a humor to presume abuses of power, it is as fair to presume them on the part of the State Governments, as on the part of the General Government. And as it is more consonant to the rules of a just theory, to trust the Union with the care of its own existence, than to transfer that care to any other hands, if abuses of power are to be hazarded on the one side or on the other, it is more rational to hazard them where the power would naturally be placed, than where it would unnaturally be placed.

Leaving the era prior to the invention of the steam engine and turning to more recent events, consider this Letter to the Editor submitted on December 8:

When Martin Luther King Jr. gave his epic speech in Washington, he saved his fondest dream for his children — that they would be judged by the content of their character and not by the color of their skin.
Character, King understood, has absolutely nothing to do with wealth, fame, skin color, education, gender or much else.
He also knew that those of good character do good things. They respect others. They respect others’ property. They are honest. They don’t cheat, steal or lie. They work hard. This is what King believed fervently.
As we watch the racial ugliness unfold in our country, let us not look at the color of the actors’ skin. Let us look at the content of their character and make our judgments.

This was written when people across the nation were flooding the streets to protest the deaths of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Akai Gurley, and thousands of other black and brown men who were killed by police brutality.  Even if the writer was well-intentioned, which I do not doubt, the idea is totally ahistorical.  Anyone who has read any legitimate biography of Dr. King knows full well that, at the end of his life, he had found the Democratic Party politicking of his earlier days simply useless.  At the end of his life, having spent many years secretly communicating and socializing with Malcolm X, King was moving in a decidedly Leftward trajectory.  He had become a vocal critic of not just Vietnam but American imperial endeavors across the globe, saying at Riverside Church in New York on April 4, 1967, one year to the day before his own death:

During the past ten years we have seen emerge a pattern of suppression which now has justified the presence of U.S. military “advisors” in Venezuela. This need to maintain social stability for our investments accounts for the counter-revolutionary action of American forces in Guatemala. It tells why American helicopters are being used against guerrillas in Colombia and why American napalm and green beret forces have already been active against rebels in Peru….As I have walked among the desperate, rejected and angry young men I have told them that Molotov cocktails and rifles would not solve their problems. I have tried to offer them my deepest compassion while maintaining my conviction that social change comes most meaningfully through nonviolent action. But they asked-and rightly so-what about Vietnam? They asked if our own nation wasn’t using massive doses of violence to solve its problems, to bring about the changes it wanted. Their questions hit home, and I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today-my own government.

As he moved boldly through his final year, King again and again sounded less and less like Gandhi and more and more like the late Minister X, if not Amilcar Cabral.  He went as far as embracing a form of Black Pride that is certainly the opposite of the sentiments expressed by the aforementioned Letter to the Editor.  For heaven’s sake, Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered shortly after offering a speech of support to a sanitation worker’s labor strike and while he was in the midst of planning a march against poverty that would have challenged not just Jim Crow but capitalism itself as a form of oppression!  Of course, something bordering on veracity would totally fly in the face of the traditional narrative of hyper-pacifist King that Edward Achorn is happy to traffic in, a slur against the man’s memory that is itself racist.  The image of a pacific-to-no-limit King gives white people a narrative that says legitimate protests from people of color must always be non-violent, must always be within the confines of what the power structure approves, and must never include even basic elements of ethnic pride and self-defense.  In other words, dem uppity thugs are wrong because Dr. King said play nice!

Let us now consider the ProJo’s history of trafficking in transphobia.  On June 5 of this year, Achorn printed this lovely epistle by Fr. Roman R. Manchester:

I find it repugnant that so many people, especially in the media, have capitulated to gender-bender ideology, and have acquiesced to Bruce Jenner’s desire to be called “Caitlyn” and are referring to him as “her” (“Jenner to world: ‘Call me Caitlyn,'” news June 2).
Have you all gone mad? This may come as a surprisingly blunt statement of the obvious, but Bruce Jenner is not a woman. He is a mentally ill man who thinks that he is a woman, and he cannot become a woman anymore than he can become a kangaroo. No amount of surgery, hormone therapy, makeup, and women’s clothing will ever change his Y-chromosome into an X-chromosome.
As a seriously ill man, Bruce Jenner deserves our compassion, not our mindless, sycophantic patronage. He needs psychiatric treatment and spiritual counseling. Yet, the herd-mentality of our day is a decidedly anti-intellectual one, and is prone to fantasy and moral equivocation.

Never mind the fact that the good Father has no certification as a psychologist, that it is profoundly unprofessional for a man of the cloth to publicly call another person mentally ill, or that gender dysphoria is a certified medical condition.  Let’s just consider that, while Ms. Jenner has plenty of money to absorb her tears, not all trans folks do likewise.  The homicide and suicide rates of trans people are galling, as are the rates of substance abuse, homelessness, and assault/battery.  Mr. Achorn has thrown gasoline on the flames without any shame and does not have to worry because he is too busy reading the baseball encyclopedia to worry about the trans folk whose assailants are given moral support by his Editorial page.

Let’s close with climate change denial, something everyone from Pope Francis to Noam Chomsky agrees exists.  On May 4, the energy industry apparatchik Tom Harris wrote this:

Reports such as those of the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change illustrate that debate rages in the scientific community about the causes of climate change. Scientists cannot even agree on whether warming or cooling lies ahead, let alone the degree to which we affect it. Yet climate campaigners assert that “the science is settled.” We know with certainty, they claim, that our carbon dioxide emissions will cause a planetary emergency unless we radically change our ways.

This is just plain silliness.  There is no denying at this point that climate change is real.  As proof, I present the findings of that oh-so-commie-pinko outfit, the US Navy!  The Navy has been devoting significant effort to the tracking of global warming for decades and wrote in a 2010 report:

A preponderance of global observational evidence shows the Arctic Ocean is losing sea ice, global temperatures are warming, sea level is rising, large landfast ice sheets (Greenland and Antarctic) are losing ice mass, and precipitation patterns are changing.  While there has been criticism on the details of the methods and results found in reports published by the IPCC and other entities, the Navy acknowledges that climate change is a national security challenge with strategic implications for the Navy.

Who’d have thunk it, the military that the ProJo acclaims as the vanguards of all that is great about the United States has said conclusively that a large swathe of articles he prints about climate issues are complete nonsense!

Ultimately Achorn will object and say all these things were done in the name of ‘objectivity.’ But under such auspices, one is forced to wonder if he would have given substantial column inches to Goebbels.

The terror of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi

Violation-of-rules-by-Pakistan1
Indian Prime Minster Narendra Modi

India is a country that seems far away yet is going to play an increasing role in our lives in decades to come.  The 1.252 billion populous nation stands behind the United States in GDP ranking and will be one of the largest economies on earth by 2030.  Indian art and theology carries a high level of pop cultural interest as sources of New Age mysticism, with interest in yoga, transcendental meditation, and religious literature like The Bhagavad Gita going through ebbs and flows every few years.  The Bollywood film genre has become a major source of interest for audiences and academics alike, with Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire having highlighted the cultural intercourse most prominently.  As the years progress, India, much as was the case when it was a British colony, will become a major center of economic and cultural exchange in the global world.  Understanding India will prove to be important because we as Americans will find ourselves again and again interacting with businesspeople, students, academics, and migrants from the subcontinent trying to integrate into our own community, and part of that understanding will need to include a basic grasp of the socio-economic and political changes taking place now under the leadership of their new Prime Minister.

On May 26, 2014, Narendra Modi became the 15th Prime Minster of India.  Within the past year, the Western media has hailed his government and he has been a prominent figure in the International pages of the New York Times, garnering accolades for streamlining the bureaucracy and helping to grow the economy.  Just a few weeks ago he was encouraging Vladimir Putin to take up yoga, now he’s strengthening ties with America and the West, it would appear that he is a genuine wunderkind and the sky is the limit for the Modi government.

But beneath the glitz and glam is a deeply disturbing individual at the center of a reactionary and theocratically-minded social movement that makes the worst of our Evangelical Christian Tea Partiers seem secularized.  He was denied a visa and prevented from entering the United States in 2005 by the Bush administration due to his support of a 2002 riot in the state of Gujarat that left up to 2,000 members of the Muslim community dead.

Modi hails from an socio-political organization named The Sangh Parivar, translated as Family of Associations, a right wing nationalist movement espousing a radical philosophy called Hindutva.  Ashis Nandy, political psychologist, social theorist, and critic, wrote this about Hindutva in 1991:

Speaking pessimistically, Hindutva will be the end of Hinduism. Hinduism is the faith by which a majority of Indians still live. Hindutva is the ideology of a part of the upper-caste, lower-middle class Indians, though it has now spread to large parts of the urban middle classes. The ideology is an attack on Hinduism and an attempt to protect the flanks of a minority consciousness which the democratic process is threatening to corner… For the believers in Hindutva, the pseudo-secularists represent those who have the style and now doing the pushing; the Muslims represent the fear of being proletarianised. Hence, the hostility to both. On this plane, the sources of Hindutva are no different from that of Islamic fundamentalism… [T]he late Nathuram Godse did not kill the modernist and “pseudo-secular” Jawaharlal Nehru but the ‘arch-reactionary’, ‘anti-national’ sanatani — Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. After the murder, Nehru could only say that the killer was insane. The modernist Prime Minister found it too painful to confront the truth that Godse was sane, that he knew who was the real enemy of Hindutva.

Sangh Parivar has three branches.  There is the para-military Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, RSS, founded in 1925 with blatant links to European fascism.  Vishva Hindu Parishad, VHP, the religious wing, promotes a brand of Hindu fundamentalism that is tremendously bigoted and especially targets the Muslim minority of India as a species worst than vermin and has promoted hatred of Christians also.  And then there is the Bharatiya Janata Party, a major opposition party in the country that has succeeded in taking power and deepening the ethnic and cultural divides that have already led to mass carnage during the 1948 partition, the various wars and border skirmishes with Pakistan, and the tragedies involving Bangladesh and Kashmir.  Modi has been involved in RSS for the entirety of his political career and was interviewed by Nandy in 1992.  He wrote a decade later, in the wake of the Gujarat riots:

Almost nothing reveals the decline and degeneration of Gujarati middle class culture more than its present Chief Minister, Narendra Modi. Not only has he shamelessly presided over the riots and acted as the chief patron of rioting gangs, the vulgarities of his utterances have been a slur on civilised public life… I often wonder these days why those active in human rights groups in India and abroad have not yet tried to get international summons issued against Modi for colluding with the murder of hundreds and for attempted ethnic cleansing. If Modi’s behaviour till now is not a crime against humanity, what is?
More than a decade ago, when Narendra Modi was a nobody, a small-time RSS pracharak trying to make it as a small-time BJP functionary, I had the privilege of interviewing him… It was a long, rambling interview, but it left me in no doubt that here was a classic, clinical case of a fascist. I never use the term ‘fascist’ as a term of abuse; to me it is a diagnostic category comprising not only one’s ideological posture but also the personality traits and motivational patterns contextualising the ideology.
Modi, it gives me no pleasure to tell the readers, met virtually all the criteria that psychiatrists, psycho-analysts and psychologists had set up after years of empirical work on the authoritarian personality. He had the same mix of puritanical rigidity, narrowing of emotional life, massive use of the ego defence of projection, denial and fear of his own passions combined with fantasies of violence – all set within the matrix of clear paranoid and obsessive personality traits. I still remember the cool, measured tone in which he elaborated a theory of cosmic conspiracy against India that painted every Muslim as a suspected traitor and a potential terrorist. I came out of the interview shaken… I had met a textbook case of a fascist and a prospective killer, perhaps even a future mass murderer.

And the reason you should be concerned is because a large amount of funding of these folks comes from the Indian diaspora.  When Modi was denied a visa, it was because he was planning to address a huge gathering of followers at New York’s Madison Square Garden that would certainly have included an appeal to the checkbooks.  To be clear, I am quite conscientious of Orientalism as a type of racism and bigotry towards Indians and members of the Hindu faith.  We are in fact seeing the promulgation of a blasphemy, not unlike the prosperity gospel of the Evangelical Christians four decades ago, that intends to politicize a religion and turn it into a method of statecraft.  And as was made clear a century ago by Lenin in STATE AND REVOLUTION, states are by default instruments of oppression and violence, saying the state “is a product and a manifestation of the irreconcilability of class antagonisms. The state arises where, when and insofar as class antagonism objectively cannot be reconciled.”

I had the opportunity to interview Arun Ferreira, he is an Indian political activist and human rights advocate who has previously been jailed and tortured by the police under trumped-up terrorism charges.

1. Narendra Modi’s election was seen as a notable event in the Western media, what explains his stature?
It is true Narendra Modi’s election is seen as a notably event in the Western Media. It has added glamour to it because just after 2002 i.e. after the anti-Muslim pogrom in Gujarat under the leadership of Modi, the US had denied Modi a visa on grounds of Human Rights violations. This election is seen by the western media as a makeover of Narendra Modi. However there is no change of heart by the Modi-led administration. As it was back in 2002, Modi was and is still willing to engineer genocides or repressive practices for the sake of so-called development­– a development serving the interests of big capital and impoverishing the poor. This is in essence what is so often called the Gujarat model of ‘development’. It is this ‘development’ model that brought him in favour with the big industrialist and financial class translating it into a Modi electoral win throughout the country. The western financial powers led by the US had brought in economic reforms and liberalization in the early 1990s. But having been stalled, they needed someone like Modi to take the process further ahead.

2. It seems, to an outside observer, that he is ramping up the religiosity of the Indian national dialogue and asserting a sort of stance not unlike the American religious conservatives have done in the last 35 years since the election of Ronald Reagan.  Is this a fair description?
Narendra Modi’s political party the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had never in the past shied from using religiosity for electoral gains or fascists designs. The BJP, ever since its inception had considerable backing of its mother organization the Rastriya Syamsevak Sangh (RSS) which was established in the 1920’s inspired by Adolf Hitler and Mussolini. In fact early in his political career Narendra Modi was a sambhaag pracharak (regional organiser) for the RSS. The vision of pan-Aryan supremacy is also shared by the BJP and other RSS affiliates and considered as Akhand Bharat i.e. an expansionist national entity to encompass the entire Indian sub-continent. Hence Modi’s religiosity is more of the Hitlerite genre.

3. Where did Modi come from, was this an out-of-the-blue thing or was there a long-simmering Hindu nationalist demographic setting this up?
I have mentioned in my earlier reply a brief history of Modi and the BJP. More details are easily available in the public domain and neither has tried to hide it. At most both the BJP and Modi have tried to camouflage it under the garb of ‘nationalism’ or ‘true secularism’. India has a highly heterogeneous demographic setup and Hindu nationalism has historically been more of an upper caste-upper class experiment to unite the various classes, castes and tribes against the foreign enemy. Hence it played a relatively progressive role in the anti-colonial struggle against the British. In modern times it has a regressive essence and is mainly used to launch attacks against dalits (the most oppressed castes), Muslims, Christians or cultural and national minorities. Hence progressive sections in India termed this pseudo-nationalismt as Hindutva Fascism.

4. What has happened to minority rights since Modi was elected?
With the Modi government it power, it has provided for an umbrella-like cover for all the reactionary forces. There has been an increase in attacks on Muslims and Christians. In some places riots are engineered, in others targeted attacks are done [towards] progressive activists such as Govind Pansare, etc. Though the Modi government has denied any explicit role in these attacks, the fact remains that there is an increase in aggressive Hindutva and anti-minority propaganda by leading members of the BJP or Sangh Parivar (the affiliated organizations of the RSS). While innocent Muslims are detained and falsely arrested in the name of countering terror, the key conspirators in all the anti-Muslim pogroms are scott free.

5. What sort of policies is Modi putting in place that are a counter to the progression Indian society had been making?
As I have mentioned earlier, the Modi government was brought in to hasten the process of globalization and liberalisation in India. He seems to be determined to pursue this goal. For example, he has thrice promulgated the Land Acquisition Ordinance which seeks to smoothen the process of the transfer of agricultural land to big Capital, although the parliament refuses to enact it amidst stiff opposition from the poor.

6. What is the status of the Congress Party and what sort of opposition do they present?
After the 2014 general elections, the Congress Party has been almost eliminated as a major opposition in the parliament. Their numbers are an all time low in the history of post-British India. Having no different model for developing India, they differ with the BJP or Modi administration merely on trivial issues or on the speed at which economic reforms are to be taken ahead. Also on both Internal and External security concerns they almost share the Modi administration’s vision. If at all there is a difference, the Modi one is a shade more aggressive.  Hence, at present their opposition is mainly opportunistic and filled with symbolism.

7. How has Modi dealt with the Naxalites [a Maoist insurgency that has made significant impact on behalf of farmers and poor people]?
Vis-à-vis the Naxalites, the Modi administration has continued the previous government’s Clear-Hold-Build counter-insurgency strategy. Through ‘Operation Greenhunt’ the previous government launched a massive military offensive against the Naxalites. The State had conducted extra-judicial killings and cultivated Contra-style militias like Salwa Judum to eliminate the Naxalites. Though such methods had faced severe criticism by civil society and the judiciary, the new Modi government continues to advocate the same, albeit in new avatars. In fact, like the earlier government, the Modi [government] is also preparing to use the Army against the Naxalite movement.

8. Do you see a great deal of violence still to come?
With the Modi government having had the history of great electoral wins after each communal pogrom, it is but natural that it will continue to use this strategy further. On the other hand peoples’ movements are continually faced with indiscriminate arrests, imprisonments, and targeted murders. Yes, I do see a great deal of violence still to come. Right from his days in Gujarat, Modi has been known to bring in globalization by such methods.

9. India has recently opened itself to Western defense contractors, do you see this as an attempt for quick cash or is there a geopolitical issue at hand here in regards to China and Russia?
I definitely see it as a geopolitical issue. In matters of foreign affairs, Modi has been keen to appease the US administration and present India as a reliable Western ally in South East Asia and as a counter-balance to the growing influence of China. Compared to the earlier Congress-led government, the present one has been more aggressive. The recent defence contracts with the US have to be seen in this light.

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